LE AE ThE Pi Seni Sb Sa b= Vase Fy ANT SE ae 2 ad biabetanng * ay y fs tA ! os br AiR Ae LO A EN, X > | he ¢ ad « rd HS i \ ~ iho bE LOR Bil es Iv « WF | Lag FACE On op > : 5 : i : : AEH 3 - Ror vy bddong . Li PREMESCE TORT FE START ILE FEREE TRAE Sey El sete te co s ~ 4 \ fy : . 4 Price Controls in the Days of Old What with all the present cone motion ahont price and wage con- trols, it is interesting to note that our forefathers experienced the same problems even back in the Revo- lutionary War days, #dward E~ Hale calls attention to the fact that recently sontcone was digging through - the old urchivés of the "Brooklyn Public Library and found that on December 31, 1776, a wage and price ceiling law was adopted by the General Asseinbly of the State of Rhode Island and Provi- dence Plantations. . Apparently the 'colonials were stirred up about profiteering be- cause the old law denounced "the unbounded avarice of many per- sons," and said war profiteering "disheartens sand diaffects the sold- fers who have nobly entered into service" and pay "is not "sufficient (o subsist them." . Here are some of the price ceils ings set then: Milk, per gallon, 9 cents, and the same for a pound of turkey; a gallon of rum was set at 63 cents and a pound of tobacco at § cents. Barbers charged 314 cents a shave, the carpenter reteived 70 cents a day and the tailor 12 cents, Lodging for a night was set at 5 cents. "Dinners" at taverns for trav- ellérs (not soldiers) of boiled and "roast meat, with other articles equivalent, exclusive -of wine," 21 cents.-- New York Times whase E. S. Welc Ontario Division of the Cana- dian Cancer Society. , President of the Diving For Oysters Amateur Fashion I could never carr my keep as a pear] diver. But perhaps" some of the good swimmérs among our sailors; soldiers; --and----marinecs would like to try it. There is no better place "than at Toba where millions of dollars in. pearls lie beneath the quiet surface of the bay. However, 1 did mermaid lent me her diving hel- met. It consisted simply of a round glass window edged with rubber, fitted over the face to pro- tect the eyes and nose, and tied behind the head. A rope was fastened to my waist, the other end attached to a tub which floaed on the water. 7 I was to dive to the bottom; fill my hands with oysters, rise and put them in the tub, and repeat 5 the round trip until the tub was gull. --] 7° Why am I tied to the tab?" 3 "So that you will find ijt casily , . ~. when you come up," the girl "answered. "And so we can find you if you . don't come up," one of my friends ". - remarked. I ignored this. "*-= A cynical audience made up of my wife, others visitors, and em- ployces of the pearl farm, watched from the near-by pier as I dived : from the launch which was used by the divers as headquarters, Struggling against water pres- sure, I swam down, my feet tang- ling in the rope. Here and there 1 cold sce white flashes of arm and leg as the diving girls went about their work. , .". t At about nine feet, with the bottom still several feet away, I gave up. I shot to the surface, gasping for air, and with no oys- ters to put into the tub. =~ My audience on the = esi 2. Very "merry. over. it, NE -- 7 When my breathing grew eas- ler, I up-ended and went down . : again. This time it was even hard- tr, not having the momentum of the dive from the launch to help he. At a depth of perhaps seven or eight feet, I was about to quit when a white something flashed sp to me and oysters rl try. A comely + ar fers Te pier ~was » EN S ES 9 ey oe AN ed into both my hands. Up I came, and, to the 4stonish- merit of all spectators, poured two good handfuls of fine oysters "into the little tub. Scarcely had the murmurs of admiration died away before 1 was down again for another ren- dezvous with my fair collabora- tor. She did not fail me, and the ; trips "were repeated until the tub 10 - wag full. My wife professed she had known all along that I could do . It, and she was rewarded for her "unswerving faith by a dish of fried oysters for lunch, every one of them containing a pearl.--From "Key to Japan," by Willard Price. Under the heading "Do Your. ) Srl is THE Own: Marketing" 4 srecent. issue a "Country Gentleman" "has ap argcle telling about, Warren Haw- ley and his son, who find it worth ten cents a dozen or more to mar- ket their eggs directly, The? TTaw- --a city, with « population of some 200000--and sell around "804% their egg production right ; - farm or directly to Stores y * ¥ * at the When wholesale JY buyers Were mg farmers 35% cents a dozen, thie Hawleyd were getting between 45 and 50 cents --depending on whe- ther 'their cpgs were sold at the farm or to the sgores in Batavia, Chey figure that to make out they have to have at least 6 cents above the wholesale market price for the eges they cell ar retail 1 * + Sales at the Hawley farm have reached as high as $100 a day. An average day will find $40 or $50 mm the tll Tive-weight cull hens are also sold at the farm, ¥ ¥ * The Hawleys haven't just done all this in recent years when the demand was high. Warren Hawley started building up the business 25 or 30 years ago when he got tired of the wide fluctuations in prices he was getting from New York City commission men. ' * * ) "We talked a couple of restaur- ant owners in Batavia into taking our eggs regularly," he recalls. "Our price was based a few cents sbove the New York markel)" * *' * i Later they added to their cus- tomers a meat market, of grocery stores and a delicates- sen. Also, they began to sell baby chicks locally.. They give most of the credit for spreading their busi- ness to word-of-mouth advertis- ing--plus an attractive Hawley egg carton, and the egg recipes Mrs, Hawley inserted in the carton. : * * * One thing the Hawleys do with- out fail is to candle and carton eggs right before their farm. cus- tomers' eves. : "They don't seem to inind wait- ing and they like to sce what they're getting," Hawley explains. Fggs kept in a cooler room. A=~girl, who is in charge of the egg room at the end of the hatchery closest to the read, takes care of this and also cleans, washes and grades for sale. She sets eggs for the incubator foo. * * * ~ "Make cash deals --no credit," advises Warren Hawley. "And be sure thaf you have a year-around, adequate supply of eggs for all customers. Too few eggs for a month or two can ruin our kind of business." * ¥ * If you raise broilers, instead of eggs, you might be interested in some experiments recently made at the University of Idaho. At a cost of only $6.37. for antibiotic supple- ment rescarch men there added $59 to the income from 1000 broilers. * * * mycin, streptomycin and penicillin --vproduced an erenge in growth rate of "chicks. Charles 5. Peters sen felt that a combination of two or more of them might possibly produce better results than using only one. And it appears that anti- biotics improve general vigour and thriftiness of birds and cut down the number of runts and culls. . * * * The thousand: birds getting the antibiotic supplement with their feed averaged 3.45 pounds at ten weeks, consumed 8.5 pounds of feed per bird and returned $604 over feed cost. Another thousand birds, getting the same ration but without the antibiotics averaged 3.2 pounds at ten weeks, ate 8.3 pounds cach and returned a net of $545. ARM FRONT leys have 9000- birds near Batavia - of a couple a are gathered four times a day and. All the antibiotics studied--aurco- He's A Perfect Cut-Up -- "What's so unusual about a man cutting out paper dolls?! you ask, the state of the world being what it is. Well, nothing, except that Giuseppe Baggi of Faenza, aly, makes his paper and wire characters so artistic that he's able to make a living at it. Baggi. has drawn crowds on three continents producing astonishing masterpieces from the simpl- est materials. He discovered his ability to "cut up" when he was a child. Most "of the experimental work has been done with levels of 50 to 100 grams of antibiotics. to cach ton of feed. Equally good results have been obtained in some cases with as little as 10 to. 20 grams per ton. + ¥ * The antibiotics are now being recommended for starting chicks, turkey poults and in broiler mashes. Work at the Experiment Station fails to show any benefit from feed- ing the for hatchability, however. FAMILY AFFAIRS The woman was applying for a separation order hgainst her hus- band. "Your. worship," she said, "he broke every dish in the house" over my head." 2 "Did your hushand express any regrets over actions at the time?" asked the judge. "No," was the reply. "The am- could speak to me." ---- his "My fiance is terribly deaf and this has got me in awful trouble." "How's that?" . - "Well, I had to yell_so loudly when I proposed to her that the awoman living in the flat above has sued me for breach of promise." Ralph 'Too?--Revenue author- ities believe they can trip up Ralph Capone, above, the same way they did his brother, the late Scarface Al Capone. Hearings will continue in Chi- cago on charges that Ralph, like Al, made false income statements. The accused was freed on a $5000 bond. Look Out, Gussie--South 'America has come up with an an swer to Gussie Moran, the tennis ace with the startling cos- tumes. Marie Goran Weiss, of Buenos Aires, Argentina, above, is not only onc of the top female tennis players in the world, but is also known for both shocking and delighting her fans with her racket attire, The Argentine beauty, shown in an outfit of white embroidered lace nylon, recently won the women's . singles at the Pan-American Games. folks were going in RTS fy A Swit CRY As far as horse racing goes we have always been a Thoroughbred fan. We have followed them for "more ycars than we would care to admit and tossed away more money trying to pick them than we like to even think about. What little reputation we ever had as a writer of short stories was made writing about Thoroughbreds and their jockeys and we still get a thrill when we recall some of the famous specdsters we' have. watched "in action, such as Exterminator, Man O'War, Sir Barton and a whole lot more. * * * (We mention these things not in any spirit of boasting, or of apology either, but simply to show that, as between. Thoroughbred Racing and the Harness Horse Variety our preference has always been for the former.) + * * But we do not like to- see any Sport, whether we are a follower _ of same-or not,-handed a raw deal, especially when the dealing is done by a Government that is supposed to represent all classes, not just the upper ones, And that is exactly what the Trotters and Pacers ap- pear to have got from the Govern- ment that 'does its stuff up in ucens Park. x # * But don't take our word for this. Listen to. what Milt Dunnell, Sports Editor of The Toronto Daily Star, had to say about it in a recent issue of that paper. * x : ~The Harness Horse mob -knew- that some persofi'was trying to kid them when the Ontario Racing Commission was formed. One mem- ber of the Commission was to re- present the interests of the trotting and pacing crowd. First indication - of the weight this member would carry on the new O.R.C. came when they neglected to inform him of the first meeting last year, at which the O.R.C. called in the Press, It was explained there was no business pertaining to harness racing--just the announcement that the sulky riders wouldn't be allow- ed to race under lights at the dolled-up Thorncliffe Raceway. * * * In the above Mr. Dunnell, of course, is referring to the 1950 rac- ing scason and, we fear, his re- marks arc slightly sarcastic. The announcement that the Thorncliffe for Harness Horse Racing in a large way was the biggest thing to hit the sport in Ontario since MAUD S, was foaled --and that's a-long-time ago.- The <"|. promoters: spent- a lot of money fixing up the track and offered a heap of money in purses. It was an understood thing that they intend- ed to race under floodlights. But, without warning, and without the Harness Horse representative' being notified of the meeting, the Racing Commission told The Press that floodlight racing was "no dice" Later on, when they proposed to hold. twilight meetings, without the benefit of electricity, -the clamps were put even on that Now, back to Milt Dunnell. A ~ . Btandard Bred Yesterday -- he continues -- the enthusiasts got more assurance of how highly they rate with the Ontario Racing Com- mission. Not only was the night- racing han renewed, but the Race- way people were aided in working out an agreement to interrupt their daytime trot meeting for six days while the runners were going 'at Hamilton's. second méet--45 miles away.. That's really rubbing salt in "the wound, Come to think of it, though, Lmaybe the Commission is saving 'the Raceway' - promoters money, Off last year's experience-- the more they race the more they lose, But the O.R.C. should come out and admit that its only real in- terest in the Standard Breds. is to make sure. that they don't inter- fere, in any way, with what's going on at the running horse tracks. * LE * Which last, of course, is the last thing the O.R.C.--or its boss the Ontario Government--is ever likely to admit. In fact Premier Frost, speaking in Legislature, told, the people of Ontario that the sole rea- son for banning night racing was to protect 'them from the "deadly consequences bound to follow on its introduction. Night racing would greatly spread the evil of gambling! Night racing would cause people to bet who couldn't afford to: lose! Night racing would attract to the fair city of Toronto some really low "down characters! And so on, and so-on, until it was a wonder that his listeners didn't burst into tears ----or else that our worthy Premier didn't Dreak down langhing at him- self. ' s Now until last scason, when we visited Thorncliff¢ Raceway hali-a- dozen or so times and thoroughly. enjoyed the sport provided, we had- n't-been at a Harness Horse meet- ing in 'fifteen years or more. We hold no brief for the Standard Bred people and don't know five of them even to speak to. But we think we know a little about human nature, and here are a few remarks we would like to pass along to Pre- mier Frost and the Ontario Rac- ing Commission, * *- * A character in the unforgettable book "PAL JOEY" once remarked "If it's going to happen it will hap- pen at. four o'clock in the after- noon; if it isn't going to happen, it won't happen if you stay .out all night" or words to that effect. It is true that he was speaking of something quite different from bet- ting on the horses--=but his remark goes for gambling too. If people arc going to gamble, they'll do it no matter what o'clock it is. If they can't do it on the horses, they'll do it on Bingo, Poker, or playing "the stock market. And so far as gambling on the Harness Horses goes -- well, we don't believe it would be hard to find, in the city of Toronto alone, anywhere up to five hundred people who will take your: bets on the Thoroughbreds, yet we don't know of a single place where we can place a wager on the. Trotters and Pacers. * * * And we'll go even. further than that--if night racing can produce more people betting who - cannot afford to lose, and more characters you'd hate to meet in a dark alley, than you'll find -any racing after- noon at--say-- Dufferin Race Track, it must be really something out of this world, *= ox * The fact of the matter is that - Harness Horse racing have fallen down in one highly important par- ticular, IT HASN'T ATTRACT- ED THE PROPER PEQPLE. Most of those you sce at Stagfdard' meets are folks interested in byeed- ing; owning and racing trotters and paters or men and women intrigu- ed--in the sport itself. What they need)is the type of man who goes in for the racing game not because he gives a hoot Yor it, but because it gives him a chance to get his name and picture in the papers as- sociating with the clite--even the remote possibility of sceing him- -self pictured- on-the front page of The Globe & Mail accepting a * up from the hands of Royalty. 1f the Trotting and Pacing crowd could only get a few of THAT SORT interested, we'd have floodlight racing" So fast that Bob Saunders : would hardly have time to turn the Hydro-juice on. ". * * * And when the season was over nobody would be the worse off--or any more badly broke = than they are now when Woodbine, Dufferin, Long Branch, Hamilton, Stanford ~and all the rest of them get through + improving the breed. All this, of course, is a strictly personal opinion, However, that's the way we feel about it, and we cannot say other- wise. ame Sa -------------- -- writing TWO YOUNG MEN AGE 22 TO 28 TO TRAIN AS SALES ATTENDANTS for Dr. Scholl's. Foot Comfort Shops in London and Taronto. Must have at least one year's experience in retail shoe selling. Apply stating age, education and- experience, in own hand- Mr. J. A. Adams, THE SCHOLL MFG. CO. LIMITED, 112 Adelaide Street East, Toronto / ' . N vt : one eo hd | NE d Advertisin ~Ulassitie ve AGENTS WANTED MEDICAL "OILS, GREASES, TIRES A TRIAL -- Every sufferer 'of BATTERIES, puiuts, electric motors, Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis should stoves, radios, refrigerators, fast frees , try Dixon's Remedy. i. , * ers, milk coolers and feed grinders, Power MUNRO'S DRUG STORE bi saws, drills, und athies, «cle, eens n 1.0 » : ind) Write: Warco Grease wand Of) 335 gs s ; Ottawa Limited, 'Toronto a 1.25 Express Prepaid ECHO Greetjng Card Company. High aial CHESS WART REMOVER -- leaves ho" "ity cards, excellent Service, good come gence, Your Druggist sells CRESS, mission, Wholesale, retpil. Al Mumgs Ave, ' 3 VL IL IS ba SL CI. Brantford, Ontario. te erty POST'S ECZEMA SALVE - FREE: The Way of Salvation explained. BANISH the worment .of dry eczema rashes i Wanted: Agents to sell Biblds, Christian and weeping skin troubles. Post's' Ecgema . Bupplics. ve Salve will hot disappoint you. Kingston Bible Colle itching, scaling, burning eczema, acne, Kingston, Nova Scotia, ringworm. ptmples "and athlete's foot; wil) A FCI FEI kia respond readily to the stainless, odorless " ___™pAby HICKS = a sintinent. wegardless of how stubborp er WHEN a"bird has given you twelve dozen uopeless they een 2 eggs she has Just about paid her ex- rice $1.00 PER JAR : pen; es. By each additional dozen she bh is POST'S REMEDIES™ . glven you ler profit. No mattes how well sent Post Free on Receipt of Price i i 'You care for her.she cannot give you oie $80 Queen Sto Corner of 'Logan, Toronte pio than what has heen bred in her. One pee . REE RE S } dozen, two dozen and-five dozen more, "PEP UP" that is the hard cash in your pocket Try and that's what you get when you order €. C. & B. TONIC TABLETS Top Notch ROI +Sired Chicks. Also tor low vitality and general debility. Turkey Poults. Older Pullets. Free Cata- One Dollar, At Driggists logue. } } -------------- a Simm - Top Notch Chick Sales, QUIT cigarettes ----- the easy way. Use Guelph, Ontario. ~~ Tobacco Eliminator, a scientific treat- GENUINE HY-LINE CHICKS ment; quickly and permanently eliminates Crosses of inbred lines Bred like good the craving for tobacco, vids the system of hybrid corn. Early maturing uniform pul: nicotine. King Drug Pharmaceutical Chem- lets. Twelve to 14 months lay, less broods ists, Vegreville, Alta. Write P.O. Box 873, ness. 100's on the farm Comparison Tests London, Ont . 72 's89 per ben housed TR Show how buns Es Ibs. in SUFFERERS from Rheumatic or Arthritic 11 weeks. Catalogue on request. Hy-Line © pains: If you cannpt get relief, write: Chicks. 682 Quéen Street, Chatham, Ont. Box 123, Winnipeg, Manitoba. AlL OUR CILICKS are R.O.P. Sled | pyro NITIES FOR MEN & WOMEN with a proven breeding background of up SLA Si to' 293 eggs. 'These certified breeders are > n offically proven the cream of Canadian sonBE 5 HAIRDRESSER voultry and their production wHI - truly * Great Opportunity Leafs - astonish "you. We have 8 Gov. banded i Hairdressing breeds (pom hich {0 choose, Freq San | picasant suid brafesson. £000 waren : ¢ Thousands of successful Marvel graduates a ton. Ontario America's Greatest System SPRINGHILL Blood-tested Chicks are pro- Ulastrated Catalogue Free ._fitable. All popular breeds at $12,712,504. =~. Welteor Call. - v pullets $24 00. heavy cockerels $4.50. Spe- MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS cials on started chicks. mixed and pullets. 358 Bloor St. W., Toronto N Springhill. Farm. Preston, Ontario. Branches: hn EERE IN TE AI -- 44 King St, Hamilton WHICH is the cheapest pullet chick to 72 Rideau St. Ottawa buy? One that costs a cent or two more per chick, but that will lay eggs to the ACTUALLY play piano easily by our one value of $1.50 to $2.00 more in a year. dollar deal, "Music in Color." No. les- Tweddle R.O.P. Sired Pullets are an illus- sons. Write now to: Box 1791, Hollywood tration of the above. Write for 1951 illus- 28, Calif, i trated catalogue telling about Tweddle I ; R.O.P. Sired Chicks. Also Turkey Poults FREE, to those who 'are married, or about - Older Pullets. in to be married, we will send a free copy Tweddle Hick Hatcheries Limited, 6f 'Marriage Hygiene" upon request, with or Fergus, Ontario. four cent postage stamp. Home Hygiene. -- BE Ba TRS FW od Company, 28 Wellington Street West, Tor- DOUGLAS CHICKS onto; Ontarlo. : Buy the best, buy DOUGLAS quality ass chicks. Variety of pure Breeds Day old or NURSERY STOCK started. Price List ri request satisfaction -- me -- guaranteed . FRUIT 'Frees, omall fruits, Shade trees, \ Evergreens, Shrubg, Roees. All leading POVGLAY HATCHERY varieties, at right prices. Send, today for tittsvi €, ntario free catalogue, Central Nurseriés Limited. DYEING AND CLEANING 'AL GL Hun & Son, St. Catharines, Ont. 1 by SEANID eign HAVE you anything needs dyeing or clean. STRAWBERRY PLANTS ing? Write to us (or Information. We "Kellogg-Premier"; "*Valentine"; *Fair- are glad .to answer your questions. De fax'; "*Senutor-Dunlop," $12.00 thousand; partment H, Parker's Dye Works .imiled. $2.00 hundred. Cleaned. Trimmed. Discase 791 Yonge St., Toronto i] Free. True to name. Money order, please. T == Ross Carroll, Norwich, Ontario. i FOR BALE as ie 3 : g ORDER 'NOW FOR SPRING DELIVERY . POULTS -- Hatching Eggs from Broad --Chinese Elm 12 Inch size 400 for Breasted Bronze pullorum clean 'stock. $6.95: = Dwarf Apple Trees. (MacIntosh or Started poults.and rexed toms also avall- Spy or Cortland); Dwart Pear Trees (Bart- a W. Baker, -R.R. 1, Westboro, Ont. lett or Clapp's Favorite) $-ft. size, your - WTTENTION Resort Owners--We build a cholce, $3.00 each or 8 for $7.50: Hardy 2 good cedar strip livery boat at : very 26 for $3.98; Giant Exhibition Paeony reasonable prices to the trade. Informa. "| -Privet Hedging plants 12 to 18 inch size, " tion on request. Rice Lake Boat Works, roots In red, white or pink 3 'for $1.89. Gore's Landing, Ontario. Plum trees, sweet eating -Burbank, Lom- 5 bard or Grand Duke, 6-ft. size $2.00 each % . tor $5.00. Free Colored Garden HOMESPUN Yarns 2-3-4 ply made from or 3 " long-fibred New Zealand ard native wool. Guide with Every Order. Brookdale -- Grey. brown. fawn, maroon, royal blue, Kingsway Nurseries. Bowmanville, Ont. paddy green, scarlet, yellow, black.heather, = 90c per } 1b. skein, white .95c ver } Ib. ~_ PATENTS id (approximately). Northland sweater pat. == ~ CN terns. Adult: Deer, bear, curling, Indian | AN OFFER to every inventor--List of In. design, Arctic snowflake, Wild Duck, Hia- ventlons and (ull Information sent free. watha. Childs: Deer. bear, Indian design, The Ramsay Co., Registered Patent-Attor . dog and squirrel. dancer 25c¢ each.--Knit? aeys,- 273- Bank Street, Ottawa. ting needles 25c¢ pair. Heavyweight zippers - 76c each. State length. All dellvered. Miss FETHERSTONHAUGH & Company, Pa- Mary Maxim, Box 332, Sifton, Manitoba. tent - Solicitors, Established 1890, 850 AED et Ll Bay Street. Toronto Booklet of informa COMPLETE plumbing and heating shop tion on request. with or without tools and stock. In the - village of Crysler. Apply A. I. Blais, 567 STAMPS William 8t., London, Ont. : = y tetra TT en DO you collect stamps? Send for selection PURN "nin Jipistaa scoeh Sljes, i Approvals Canaga or other countries; Boarding Kennels. Loch Rahnoch Collies | pajie onterie Fine St James, Niagara _ Registered, 1000 Byron Street South, Whit- et . by, Ontario. WANTED 80 COLONIES Italian Bees, 10 frame. | ----t = a Langstroth, with full equipment with |: CHILDREN'S nurse with references. Write new extractor tanks. Bargain, for quick Mrs. C. H. Barrett, 9 Alexandra Rd., sale. Harry Kift, $3 Patricia Avenue, Galt, Ont, Oshawa, Ontario. Phone 6254J. - WANTED 9 buy, Shetland or Hackney REGISTERED --Yorkshires. 4 Boars, 4 ~~ Pony, send price with particulars, and months old. Sows, 4 months old. 2 Sows, pletore it available, to H. S. Hall, 21 2 months old. Angus Wilson, Cumberland, Maple Street, Galt. Ontario. FREE 1951 CATALOGUE : ¥ Ed + Rip ssmosianann © Ot-Auto Parts and Accessories to garages, auto dealers, and service stations. Write: Exdale Auto Supplies. 353 St. Nicholas Street, Department' P., Montreal 1, Que, . NW es LE-- RE WINGED CATS Without Calomel -- And Youll Jump Out of hi Bed in the Morning Rarin' to Go as 3 : The liver should pour out about. 2 plata of Two cats with wings are re- bia Jules Into your digestive trast every ay. Spat » has 0 6 18 nd y, your may . ported from Spain. One has been aot digest It juat decay. In the digestive on show in Madrid. tract. $b ga4 boats up your stomac . You ---- - get constipated. You fee) sour, sunk and the There have been reports of wing- world loo Ea te Lilie ced i : : es . , gentle Carter's } ed cats in this country at differ- Liver Pills to get these 2 pints of bile flows ent tiles. One at Sheffield in 1945, 58 freely So Sagke Jon fod] Fup, and up." Fh oS A Pp e . eotive in had four fur-covered wigs, one pile flow freely. Ask Tor Carter's Little Liver pair seven inches long and the other lls. 35¢ at any drugstore. three inches long, growing from its back. Another, in 1939 had two wings of ten inches. None of them ' flew, but they anade some astonish- Here's Speedy Relief For ing jumps. T i A hi enacr, Aching : ] 9 Lo A man entered a Green Bay, Wis., police station and reported that his wife had disappeared. Ask- cd by an officer how long she had "been missing, he replied: "Eigh- teen years." 2 Special Remedies by the makers of Mecca Ointment Mecca Pile Remedy No. 1 is for Protruding Bleeding Piles, and is sold in Tube, with pipe, for internal Or lication, Price 75c. Mecca Pile Remedy No. 2 is for External Itching Piles. Sold in Jar, and is for external use only, Price 76¢, Order by number from your Druggist. HEMORRHOIDS _ Burning:Feet Your feet may 'be 86 swollen and In- flamed that you think you can't go an- other step, Your shoes may feel as if they aro cutting 'right Into the flesh, You feel sick all over with the pain and torture; you'd glve anything to get rellef. 5 Two or three applications of Moone's " Emerald Ojl and in a few minutes the vain and soreness disappears, . No matter how discouraged you have been, if you have not tried Emerald Oll then you have something to learn. Get a bottle today wherever drugs are eold. ISSUE 14 -- 1951" | Gan re = MACDONALD'S ade's Standand Smoke @® --