~ WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1950. "THE DAILY T IMES-GAZETTE © PAGE NINETEEN ) CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING (Continued from Page 18) 43--Male Help Wanted YOUNG MAN, 21 TO 25, FOR POBI- "tion -as office clerk, high school edu- cation required. Apply Ontario Mal- Hleable Iron Co., Prospect St. (248c) TWO MEN WITH CARS, ABOVE average wage. Write Box 742, Times- 'Gazette. (247c¢) JANITO R, MUST BE GOOD cleaner, honest and reliable, steady Job. Apply Commercial Hotel. (247) BRIV ERS WANTED. MUST BE neat and .courteous. Apply United Taxi, 60 King East. i (212tf) RELIABLE DRIVERS WANTED, neat and trustworthy. Apply Motor . City Cab, 9 Prince St. (212tf) CANVASSER TO COVER OSHAWA .and district for leading Toronto up- holstering . concern. Excellent com- missions. Apply M. Kaufman, c/o 142 Queen St B, Plaza 3348 or 224 Palmerston Blvd. RA. 4707. (2431) We have a good job for a LICENSED MECHANIC on an incentive pay plan. 45--Agents Wanted | GET INTO YOUR OWN BUSINESS. Will give trust- worthy party to handle local distrib- ution 200 old-established Canadian- made Necessities including christmas Gift Sets, Teas, Coffees, Toiletries, Soaps, Cleansers, and Farm Products. Earnings $60.00 week up. Five-day week. Experience un- necessary. Permanent. Write: Mr. W. R. Purnell, Dept. 41, the Pauti Co. Ltd., 21 St. Paul St. East, Mont- real, Quebec. (031) CHRISTMAS CARD AGENTS -- Read all the ads but be sure to write Monarch for sample of their Deluxe box containing wonderful plastic and sensational television card in every box. Also see their new brilliant metallic foil box. A new creation surpassing anything ever before shown. Samples on approval. Mon- arch Greeting Cards, 47 Eastos Ave. N., Hamilton, Ont, (025) 46--Employment Wanted WILL LOOK AFTER ONE OR TWO pre-school-age children, during day. also baby-sit evenings. Box 648, Times-Gazette. (248¢c) MIDDLE AGED LADY WOULD DO sitting, north end preferred. Phone 465-J. (0.23,25,27) AVAILABLE, REFINED WIDOW, housekeeper-companion, willing to travel. Phone 2675-R. So (247h) LATE MODEL. 1;-TON PICK-UP truck and driver, available. Phone 2529-J. (246c¢) helping hand to Medicines, |. Tyrone C.G.LT. Makes Plans For Fall Activities MRS. W. RAHM Correspondent Tyrone, Oct. 34 -- The Tyrone C.GIT. met on Friday evening, Oct. 20, at the home of Doreen Rahm with 15 members present. The mee! was opened with e C.G.IT. iymn and pledge, follow by the Lord's Prayer. The woyship service taken by Helen Cole and Jane McClure, was based on the 23rd Psalm. A box of fruit and candy. was packed for Stuart Hall, 'who is made for a sale and tea to be held on Saturday aft' rnoon, November 4, in the Tyrone School. A tasty lunch' was served and the meeting closed with the singing of "Taps". Long Sault Home and School Club. met- Friday evening at the school for the first meeting of the season. A short program was held and an election of officers, dfter which refreshments were served. The next meeting is to be held Nov. 10. Quite a large gathering attended | the play "Sweet Sally Brown" on | Monday, evening, put on by Black- | stock ladies in the Community Hall, the Isolation Hospital. Plans were | THERE OUGHT TO BE A LAW Bv Al Fagalv and Harry Shorten Wen IT COMES TO FINDING THINGS, CRINGELY'S THE WORST! HE COULDN'T FIND THE CUFFS ON HIS P) - | 74/4, -- > = | me -- WK =n WHERE'S MY SHIRT?" | | mt Bur IN A RESTAURANT FULL OF PEOPLE IF THERE'S A SINGLE ROCK IN A SINGLE PIN, CRINGELY'S SURE TO FIND IT! \ or SARE MEN 324 [NBICATE] 10:25 ows BITAPIT! I TINK I YUSTED MY UPPERS! | mill here, has just retired ofter 55 years' work in the bush "and never | vancouver ~-- (CP)---The Van-|mMissed a" day, son. | couver suburban billiard room op- | 2 | erators' association has placed a| | plan before city council designed to | | help combat juvenile deliquency. | Their plan is that youths of 16 and | 17 be allowed to enter pool halls. | | A city by-law at present sets the | minimum age at 18 years; YOUTTH PLAN la PROMPT DELIVERY! 241 KING ST. EAST PHONE 1351 Cranberry Portage, Man. -- (CP) | --Harry Boyd, supervisor of a saw- | WITHOUT UNDESIRABLE AFTER-EFFECTS Here's a QUICK, reliabie remedy to relieve cold miseries. Millions have used these tablets for over 50 years without undesirable after- effects! Genuine Bromo Quinine Cold Tablets fight colds internally... with a formula medicinally compounded from six fast-acting in- gredients plus precious Quinine. They'll quickly help to clear "stuffy head", reduce fevers, ease muscular pains and regu- late sluggish systems. At your druggist's. on money--buy the large family size. None Genuine Without the Signature of E. W. Grove BROMO QUININE coip tasLeTs ! A PRODUCT OF THE GROVE LABORATORIES, INC. YOUNG MARRIED WOMAN WILL | sponsored by Bethesda Club 41. IN "180. 'PROOFREAD 8 home improvement product, requires | ) J CRANFIELD MOTORS. Phone 355 (247e) A4--Male or Female Help HELP WANTED TO PULL AND top carrots, 25c per 2 bushels. Trans- ortation paid. H. Newman, Fairport Beach. - Phone Pickering TW. (247¢) HANDYMAN WANTED, WIFE AS part-time domestic; own cottage. Contact Charles Conacher, Pickering (2476) ER N AN OPPORTUNITY ¥or a man or woman with not less than high school education to engage | interesting profession under | In an ideal Previous working conditions. experience desirable but not esseritial. | Applicant should enjoy the practice of reading accurately and thoroughly. hr Fey --. Apply -- . GOODFELLOW PRINTING COMPANY LIMITED 57 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH OSHAWA, ONTARIO (247d) 45_Agents Wanted Salesman Nationally and locally advertised _@ salesman who is accustomed to 'better than average earnings. Leads supplied, and training given. IF YOU ARE SATISFIED WITH LESS THAN $5,000 PER YEAR, DO NOT REPLY TO THIS AD. Write BOX 746 TIMES-GAZETTE (248d) baby sit, any night except Wednes- | day. Phone 272-W after 6.30. (245c) | FURNACES, ALL TYPES, OIL | burners, vacuum-cleaned and justed. Stove burners installed. Phone 4690-W; 2770 Whitby. HOMES WIRED AND REWIRED. Let Charlie Mills help you with your electrical problems. Call 4503J. (N16) 47--Legal Notices NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS All persons having claims against the Estate of ARHUR ERNEST BETSON, late of the Township of | Pickering, in the County of Ontario, | Farmer, deceased, who died on May 14th, 1950, are notified to send full particulars of their claims to the undersigned before November 10th, 1950, on which date the assets will | be distributed having regard only to | claims of which notice shall then { have been received. DATED at Toronto this 16th day of 1950. October, EMMA DORA BETSON, Adminis- | tratrix, by H. P. EDGE, C.. 12 Richmond Street East, Toronto 1, Ontario, her Solicitor herein. (018,25-N1) 48--Auction Sales | tion Saturday, October 28th, 10:30 a.m., EDT, 6 room residencé, barn, chicken house, one acre of land. Im- mediate possession. Sale on prem- ises in Port Perry. Terms cash. Inquire W. T. Harris, solicitor, Port Perry, Ontario. (247¢c) Auction Sale, Stirtevant's Auction Room, 33 Hall St., Thursday evening, Bed; Occasional Chair; Rangette; Sewing Machine; Studio Couch; 2 Oil Burner Heaters; Dressers; Pe- destals; full-size Bed Spring (wal- nut); 6-piece Kitchen Suite; Vac- uum Cleaner; Combination Gas ani Coal and Wood Range; Radio; Coal and Wood Range; Dining-room Ta- bles and Chairs: Electric Range | (heavy duty); Quebec Heater with | oil burner (as new); Swivel Chair, {odd tables and chairs; Play-pen; | Rug; Folding Bed; Woollen Blank- [35 (new); Kitchen Cabinet, Table, Dishes; Winchester 12-gauge, ham- | merless, slide action repeating shot- gun (new) ;--many other articles too numercus to mention. Terms cash. Frank Stirtevant, Auctioneer. (247b) Sergius was the name used by { four popes between the years 687 |and 1012. Rationing Rigid In Hungary Fugitives from Hungary arriving here report that in desperation at their failure to keep up supplies in what was once the richest food pro- | ucing country of Central Europe, a Communists are resorting more and more to "rationing by terror, G. E. R. Gedye writes from Vienna to The Montreal Star. The wishes of the Kremlin rather 'than the requirements of the popu- ation are now the deciding factor in allotting the available agrarian ucts. . prod Power Politics The Hungarian worker -- like workers in other satellite countries which produce foodstuffs in abun- 'dance, for example, Romania -- is called upon to face near-starvation so that more food may be sent to Eastern 'Germany in the interests of Soviet power politics. °° Arbitrary arrests, deportations, and savage - prison sentences are among the methods of "rationing . by terror" in Hungary. Since they are designed to silence grumbling, they have to be given a publicity usually denied to Communist ter- rorism. On September 24, for example, the | government announced that a rev- olutionary tribunal had sentenced two persons, Paul Krisnaya and Joseph Pos, to death for "irregular. ities in the distribution of rationed foodstuffs" and that both were hanged immediately after %entence. Six others were sent to. prison for terms varying from 10 to 15 years. Terrorist Judge The judge was the notorious ter- i rorist Vilmos Thy, whose reputa- tion is beginning to rival that of the Russian hanging judge, Ulrich. It was Thy who last year sentenced to - death the former Hungarian © (Communist) foreign minister, Rajk. He also conducted the "show trials" in Budapest of the Ameri- can, Robert Vogeler, and the Eng- lishman, Edgar Saunders, on char- ges of espionage, as well as that of Ca.dinal Mindszenty, and enjoys the full confidence of the Russian M V.D. (secret police). = Among the new crimes invented by the Hungarian Communists are "buying large quantities of poppy- seeds, shelled walnuts, cucumbers +and cabbages." The central Com- munist ne'vspaper, "Sgzabad Nep," on September 21, gave the names of 18 persons on winom heavy sentences , | lator." Anyone who doesn't Life is as simple as | were passed for these crimes. Per- sons accused of "hiding flour and textiles," the newspaper stated the next day, had also been severely dealt with, the sentences including "deportation" to unknown destina- tions, There is 'n Hungary no regulation | ec.ablishing -- nor is there any { means of finding out -- 'how much ! may be bought or stored without a c-arge of "hoarding". Instead, the | regime seeks to limit purchases by | sheer terror, | Complex Life | Any person who stands in a queue | is now liable to arrest as a "specu- {ly to starve. | that in Hungary today. {| The worst instruments in spread- | ing the ration-terror are the of- | ficial "snoopers" called "People's | Educators", who have absolute pow- ers to put a stop to queuing. The | week before last, for example, a | police van stopped beside a queue of weary women outside one of the ! "Kozerts" (nationalized food s' ops) in Budapest and a "People's | Educator® got out. "I see you have nothing to do," he remarked caustically, "so I will take you for a ride." The women were forced to get into the van, driven to the outlying { industrial suburb of Cepel and | dumped there, to find their way back to the city as best '"=y could. Next day another queue of women was rounded up and set to cleaning police barracks. --_-- TRACK WOLVES | Regina, Sask. CP) Sas- | katchewan government field of- | ficers- have been asked to pin- {point trails over which marauding | timber wolves now are passing. |The game branch hopes with this information to get the pump on | the wolves who take heavy toll of | game and fur-bearing animals each | winter. 9% BACK TO HUNGARY Budapest, Oct, 25--(Reuters) -- | Ninety Hungarians returned to {Hungary from Canada Tuesday. | {Most of those repatriated were | workers and farmers. 'Some of ithem left Hungary after the Sec | ond World War, and returned un- | der the provision. ¥ an amnesty. | The 90 crossed the Atlantic in the | Polish liner Batory. They landed {in Gdynia and came by train to | Budapest. tr FLOWER EXPERTS | Foremost, Alta. -- (CP) -- The | Van Staalduines came to this dis- trict from Holland with a love of flowers and horticultural experi- ence gained in the old country. Flowers grown on the Van Staal- duines farm scored notable tri- umphs in shows at Calgary, Leth- bridge and Medicine Hat. CROSSWORD - - Mr. and Mrs. Roy Maynard, - By Eugene Sheffer Vivian and Joy Chamberlain, Mrs. ad- | (N17) | October 26, at 7 p.m. sharp: Studio | is like- | J. McRoberts, visited Mr. and Mrs. S. Geach, Kendal. Mr. and Mrs. Hénry Wood and | family, Oshawa, visited Mr. and | Mrs. T. McRoberts, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Tuck, Tor- onto, Mr. George Stainton, 'Osha- | wa, Mr. and Mrs. J. Stainton and Carol, Solina, Mr. and Mrs. Herb | Stainton, Hampton, Mr. Luther | Stainton, visited Mr. and Mrs. Hen- | ry Stainton on Sunday. | Mr. and Mrs. T. Douglas, Toron- to, visited Mr. 4nd Mrs. F. L. Byam. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Murney and | family, Peterboro, visited Mr. and | Mrs. Walter Park. Mr. and Mrs, Walter Rahm, | Clem and Doreen, visitéd M+. and | Mrs. Alex Perger, Waterdown, with | Master Jr. Perger returning home | | with them for a visit, | Miss Doris Millington, Taronto, | | spent the week-end with Mr. and | Mrs. Everton White, | Miss Bernice Brown of Toronto, | Messrs. Lawrence Tabb, Oshawa | and Roy Prescott, Bowmanville, | visited with Mr. and Mrs. T. H.| Tabb. J Mr. Charles and Miss Helen | Brown, Peterboro, visited Mr. and | Mrs R. B. Scott. ! Mrs. E. Storie visited with Mrs. R. Burgess. Miss Lillian McRoberts, Toronto, | visited Miss Yvonne Byam. | Mr. and Mrs. Théo Down and children, Lakefield; Mr. and Mrs. | | Harry Meércer, Orono, visited Mr. | | and Mrs. R. Virtue. i Mr. and Mrs. H, Hall, Mrs. W. T. Worden, visited Stuart Hall at the Isolation Hospital and Mrs. A. Scott at. St. Joseph's Hospital and were also tea guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. Gamble, Toronto, Mr. and Mrs. John Oke visited Mr. and Mrs. Neil Yellowlees. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Glaspell and children visited Mr, and s. Alex McMaster, Zion. Welcome to Mr. and Mrs. Bert Johnston and Jack to our com- munity who have moved to the | late Wallace Miller farm, | Mrs. T. Aked and Miss Aleen | |are leaving their summer home | | this week to spend the winter in! | Toronto. | ! Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Clapp | { visited Mr, and Mrs. Dave Hooper, | Orono, with Mrs. E. Storie, return- {ing home with them. PF. Findlay, Thornhill; Mrs. O. Virtue, Mr. and Mrs. Lance Plain, Bow- manville, Mr. and Mrs. Jabez Wright, visited Mr. and Mrs, F. Werry. Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Goodman vis- ited Mr, and Mrs. W. Williams, Bowmanville. to, Mr. and Mrs. R. Burgess. Mr. and Mrs. Theo, Down and children, Lakefield; Mr and Mrs. T. Kilty, Mrs, V. Millson, Torou.o, visited Mr. and Mrs. Leon Moore. Mrs. B. Benson and son, King; Mrs, Alf Brown, Newcastle; visited Mr. and Mrs. Harold Skinner and Mr. and Mrs, Lloyd Skinner. Mr. and Mrs. A. Little, Barry and Diane, Markham; visited with Mr. and Mrs. T. Scott. Misses Edith and Joyce Woodley, Bowmanville; .spent the week-end with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Woodley. Mr. and Mrs. A. Croff and child- ren, Brampton; Mr. and Mrs. Rus- | sell Philp, Peterboro; visited Mr. and Mrs. Howard Philp. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wood and children visited Mr, and Mrs. R. Brewer, Oshawa, on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. G. Perfect and children, Bowmanville; Mr. and Mrs. W. Gibbs, Oshawa, visited Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gibbs. Mrs. M. Hughson is spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. G. Ar- nold Gormley. Mrs. D. Tait, Mr. Victor Miller, Castleton; visited Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Miller. Mrs. Lorne Annis spent the week- end with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Big- nell, Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jones, To- ronto, visited Mr, afd Mrs. J. A. Rosevear, Mr. and Mrs. H. Brent, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brent, visited Mr. and | Mrs, J. Clark, Agincourt, on Sun- | day. : | Mr. and Mrs, R. J. Cassidy, To- ronto, visited Mr. and Mrs. H. | Brent. | Mr, and Mrs, Harold Burgess and children, visited Mr. and Mis. 'M. Tennant, Salem, | "Mrs, T. Scott entertained a num- | ber of ladies last Thursday after- | noon- in honor of | Byam, bride-to-be 'at a cup and saucer shower. : . | Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Rahm, Wes- | ton. Sdrs; WH. Ralim, Burketon, | visited Mr, and Mrs. Waltér Rahm. Rev. and Mrs. Thomas Smith and and Mrs. D. Lute, last week. Mr. and' Mrs. Neil Yellowleés in | family, Troy; were guests of Rev. | company with Mr, and Mrs. E. ' Hockaday, Solina, and were guests Mr. and Mrs. Bert Findlay, Mrs. | little Gail | Walker, Langstaff, visita Mr. and | Mr. and Mrs. Otto Virtue, visited | $tiss- | es Anna and Effie Wright, Oshawa, | Mr. and Mrs, E. G. Boyd 'Toron- | 47. chasten 50, independe* Asiatic kingdom imitate eminent street rail- ways (abbr.) Russian local community 56. cauterizes 57. bond HORIZONTAL . donkey .a navigation system . church bench . nonsense! . feeble- minded . past frighten . allotment . pull tight . uniform 51. 52. 54. 55. VERTICAL Arabian garments seasoning make keen sorceress upon tear violently plant of lily family nerve medicine . cosmetic . personality . prevailed . harsh respiratory sound . decimal units . river in Africa . artless . paradise . hazard . East Indies NN SHTatle te . evident . bury . mirth Answer to yesterday's puzzle. chickpea . goddess of . reaps . prefix: double Lio R [4] R S A the moon . lifeless . divisions NER A ART TIA PIAlIIN . speed . river in T of the year . breastwork Go N France . asterisk . foot-liké organ . painful . sufferer from =z = . indefinite A R N D E : S leprosy article . fruit skins . minister to 43. cry of . subsided . fortified Mediter- dd Bacchanals 45. NIA Z|m-- ranean Spanish 46. » >| mil» =m] > painter 47. E | R E island 40. mistake S E S R 3 D otherwise 48. 42. facility 44. diatoni¢ run (mus.) Distributed by Kin, Rewards in | By LOUIS L. LECK i Canadian Press Correspondent | Sydney, Australia (CP) -- People earn money in many odd ways in | Australia, and the rewards are fairly substantial. | An expert chicken sexer, for in- | stance, may earn $45 a day and a | good dingo hunter, going after wild | dogs, can make just about as much. Chicken sexing of course is prac- | tised everywhere, but to earn $45 | a day in Australia the expert must be able to examine 60 to 600 day- | old chicks an hour, and separate | the pullets and cockerels with 93 per cent accuracy. The art, or science, was developed | by the Japanese and in 1934 a Jap- anese taught a class of 20 Austral- | ians how to sex chickens. Only four | gained proficiency certificates and {one of them was Frank Evans, 19 | years old at the time. In 1936 Japs were forbidden to énter Australia and Evans became an instructor -- the only one in | Australia and New Zealand. Few Acquire Skill Only ahout one learner in 10 ac- quires the necessary skill. It takes about three months. The instruc- tor's fee is about £25 and most of the .15,000 to 20,000 chicks needed for practice have to be post-mort- emed to check accuracy. The sexing season in. Australia lasts about five months but Aus- tralian sexers are in demand in Britain and the continent and far- mers there will pay travelling ex- penses and good pay to sexers who will go abroad. Dingo Damage Heavy | Dingo hunters earn good money | because Jdingoes do big damage in Australia. In New South Wales 'and Queensland, graziers estimate | stack losses, from dingoes at nearly $4,000,000 since the war. In Western Queensland towns, bank clerks, shop assistants, solici- Miss Yvonne | tors and other professional men sometimes spend their entire week- ends hunting dingoes. | But the. job isn't easy. It calls at the Porter-Cation wedding ' at { Brampion on Saturday. Mr. R. Shirk and Mr, and Mrs. Bazil Shirk, Orillia, have moved in part of Mr. and Mrs. O. Beckett house. Russie Experts Given Big Unusua male sheep slender finial §1e=3 49. Greek letter 53. symbol for g Features Syndicate erbium > [Clay Soils | Respond To Phosphorous Ottawa -- Grains when grown as a nurse crop for alfalfa on the heavy textured clay soils of Essex County should be fertilized with a 2-16-6. The rate of fertilization should be three hundred to four hundred pounds per acre. Tests conducted by the Dominion Experimental Station, Harrow, in 1949 and 1950 showed that alfalfa gave bigger yields where the pre- | ceding grain crop was fertilized with 2-16-6 than where any other | fertilizer in the test was used. All fertilizers containing fairly percentages of phosphorous gave better crops of alfalfa than those having lower levels of this element. The grain crop responded as well to a 2-12-10 as it did to the 2-16-6 indicating that in addition to phos- phorous; nitrogen and potash are necessary for grain. These results as a whole show that grain seeded alone can be fertilized satisfactorily with a 2-12-10 or possibly a 2-12-86 but when alfalfa is being seeded in | the grain, the should be used. These results refer to the Brook- | 2-16-6 fertilizer ston clay soils which comprises al- | most two thirds of Essex County as well as a good portion of other counties in southwestern Ontario. Certain other crops do not show the same response to phosphatic | fertilizer, for example corn appears to ,respond thore to nitrogen than | to 'phosphate. Whooping cough any age from two may occur weeks to at 80 | years. ) MONUMENTAL WORKS 318 Dundas St. E., Whitby Phone Whitby 55% MUNUMENTS AND FINE QUALITY MARKERS Precise workmanship and care- ful attention to detail are your assurance when, you choose from the wide selection of im- ported and mestic Granites and Marbles in stock. 1 Jobs | for hard work, patience and in- || genuity. Dingoes breed most rapidly in | large tracts of thinly populated | rough scrub country, The average | litter is four to six pups. i They usually hunt in packs of six to 14. They attack sheep or calves | at the break of day or during the night. Heavy Losses Incurred One dingo will kili- as many as 30 sheep in a foray, while a pack of 14 will destroy and maul hun- dreds in one night. | They have been known to attack | people, but generally they are afraid | of human beings and retire quickiy if, chased : "Doggers" (dingo killers) study the movements of their quarry be- fore laying traps. These are care- fully concealed and invariably placed near trees. ning" Jack Heffernan, who at 68 is still one of the best doggers in NSW. Heffernan, working near Casino, kills four to five dingoes a day on an average. The govern- ment pays him £3 a scalp. ASPHALT SHINGLES ERNIE CAY LUMBLED Phone 127 J 53 Albert St. ¢ Exclusive Dealer for IMPERIAL OIL ESSO . OIL BURNERS and ~NEW IDEA FURNACES GAR WOOD TEMPCYED AIR UNITS Ba Oo % | E SHEET" METAL CHURCH ST. eo PHONE Soro | | | Veteran trappers include 7 { 32 KING ST. WEST high | Stafiord Bros. | | : "I see the O'Malleys bought that house on Melrose Street." Although Mr. and Mrs. Reader are glad to know about the O'Malleys, they have a lot of other things on their minds, problems right in their own home: Is this a good time to trade in the old car? Are we carrying enough insurance on the house? What shall we have for Sunday dinner? Our readers are interested in the news and ad- vertising that relate to their peeds. Give them the news abaut your merchandise and services through the advertising columns of this newspaper. Ask for a copy of our A.B.C. report* which will give you complete and audited information about our circulation. The Daily Times-Gazette *This newspaper is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations, a national association of publishers, advertisers and advertising agencies. Our circulation is audited by expe. rienced A.B.C circulation auditors. Our A.B.C. report shows how much circulation we have, where it goes, how obtained and other facts that tell advertisers what they get for their money when they use this paper. Generously PS This Appeal Is Sponsored by . . « CREDIT JEWELLERS Ltd. PHONE 389 |