7 â- i^ II iilljJWiiilii^w iJili â- ^^mmismm I t^i' 4. 7? -4 >â- 1 V r Ml 'i •* [♦ « ♦ « i * Sports-And One Thing 01 Anothei By FRANK MANN HARRIS In times of rising prices and food shortages, a writer enjoys one great advantage over his fellow citizens. If he has nothing else to exercise his teeth on, he can always eat his own words; although we wouldn't really recommend the custom as either very nourishing or even satisf^'ing. « * « This is by way of saying that we find it necessary to take back some- thing we wrote; and at the same time tender apologies to an athlete whom we have been cruelly wrong- ing in the past. Like practically every sports-cobbler on the Contin- ent, we have been poking fun at the pretensions of Primo Carnei.i as a wrestler! and even hinting that his adversaries must be taking great care in their handling of the Ambling Alp, for fear that some night he would snap in two. * ill He Now we leajn, on good author- ity, that such jibes were entirely uncalled-for. Paying a visit recent- ly to these parts was our oid friend Ivan Mikailof, the man who did more to make large sections of On- tario wrestling-conscious than any other individual, and one who knows what he is talking to. When we hinted that Mr. Camera must require a good deal of protection in his bouts, Mikailoff scouted the idea. "You are all wet," he told us. "Dat Camera was a wrestler for five ten years before he ever went into dat crazy boxing racket. He can wrestle like nobady's business, and don't need anybody to carry him or protect him whatsoever." * ♦ * So our humble apologies to Car- nera for the foul wrongs we have been doing hirn in the past. We are glad to hear that his wrestling activities are paying him around two thousand dollars a week â€" and that he's actually getting the dough â€" which is a lot more tlinn he did, in spite of the big gates he drew, \ I'cn mixed up wilh what Mikail- off terms. "dat crazy boxing rnckrt". * * * ,Wn 1>[-FI.\ITI0NS. A Mili- tary E.ri'crl is a man tc7;o ran assure ^':t• l>i!bli<\ ti-'ilh a perfectly siraighf j\ii\\ llwi the atomic hnmb has made luTi-ics. armies and air forces obsolete r.nd then, zi'ith i:is. as siraighl a fa:e, solemnly recommend that :(r shjiihi , sl>ciid dpiihit tchat it r are '7 I,-' our doii'.fi nd:' sir nalh. viilitnrv It is sunie time .-iince we ^aw a hockey game in the fair city of . Montreal; hut they fell ns that there is an atinosphcrc of gloom down aroum! The Forum that you could easily cut with a knife. For years [.es Canadicns have been top doss in pro hockey; and even when ll-e Maple I-cafs knocked them loo-so ironi the Stanley Cup last spring iheir loyal supporters put it down as more or less of a fluke. liut it's funny what a difference jii>; a few months can make, es- pecially in sport. At this moment tlie Frenchmen are seriously thrwiteniiig to drop out of the bot- tom of the league â€" and only the Weakness of the Chicago Ulack Hawks' inner-guard keeps the Monti ealers out of the cellar. Xow, with 'I'oe Blake - one of their few remaining spark pulgs â€" out of it imlefinitcly, their plight is a sorry one â€" in faci a man selling cr.inj; towels v.onld probaMv find a ready and highly profitable tnark- cl doun there, especially among the h'rcnch-Canadian rooters, who re.illy take their hockey seriously aiul their losses ihe hard way. .\nd a gent by the name ol Bou cher nuist he having many a quiet chuckle to himself. Vou will recall tlie jeers and sneers which grcated Krankic's prediction, at the start of the season, that the Montrcalers woiddn't make the playoffs. Well â€"in their first eight games this season, Canadiens have emerged with just exactly four points â€" one wn and two tics â€" making it seem as though maybe Mr. Boucher wasn't as far off the beam as some of us who laughed at his "screwey" prodictinn « ♦ * And i: ayhe ycit've heard tlie one about the fruit and veqetabU dealer who '.:'!S recently obser^rd closinp his esl"blishmei:t for the tiinhl. A friend n'ho U'n.f tookinp on, noticed somcthinrj unusKal in Ihe dealer's ac- tior:s and questioned him. "It's all rifiht" was the reply. "The tcay thinris are these days I l>ut the rah bape in the reiiistcr. and lcn':'e the cash in Ihe 7i'indnn:" ♦ * ♦ K.iekeUHrs â€" sure-thing artisti â€" have always been with us; in fact we think it was Kipling who once surmised that the real secret of I heops' pyramid was prc<l>ahly thai "the contractor did Cheops out of several millions." Now, on the .luthority oj a recent magazine article, we le.irn that even the sacred game of F. INCiO isn"t free from the gentry wlio always like to h;i'e :i'i ace i'' the hole. If s •-. -A-- t !'; )-,* rive wo ;i\ junte •nciliod- ol tulon^ the el A Substitute for the Dog Team? â€" The Eskimo in the above picture looks rather modern, seated at the wheel of an up-to- date tractor. But in many wa\s these people still follow the same customs which liave pre%'ailed in Arctic regions for cen- turies. Life among the Eskimos â€" and the work the Canadian Government is doing to help tlieriiâ€" is strikingly pictured in the National Film Board movie "Eskimo Summer". *( Elskimo Summer'' It would probably surprise a great many people ttJ learn that quite a few of our so-called "modern" inventions and gadgets are really old â€" and cen- turies old at that. Take our heating, for instance. Xow this is supposed to be the acme of modernity. But, if you care to look at "Eskimo Sum- mer" a National Film Board film dealing with the Eskimo of Canadi'i eastern .Arctic region, you will see that oil heating has been used by these peoples for countless centuries. .â- \nd, even further, the Eskimo use oil for livihting as well. In case you're interested in using oil â€" a la Eskimoâ€" you first take a stone and grind and polish it until you have ci^ii verted it into a shallow, open dish. Xext you gather dried moss and fashion it into a wick, which you place in your dish. Then, you obtain some whale oil, which you pour into the dish around your wick. And there you are, all set. not only to heat your igloo (or skin tent in the stnnmer timcV but to li'jht it as well. Ancient and Modem "E.skimo Summer" also brimrs to light and contrasts the ancient and tnodern in present day Eskimo life. .•Mongside the stone whale-oil lamp you will often see a primus stove; asnin. the neighbour of the man who uses a primitive fish trap will prob- ably he iisitig a white man's net : and, in matters of transportation, diescl- powered fishing boats will be seen pulled u;i on shore alongside the old fashioned buoyai't skin kayaks. Staff of Life Sununer lime in the eastern arctic is a short but busy season. The bitter cold of winter is never far from mind, and the men and women work feverishly to lay in a supply of food for the lean months of blizzard and isolation. The menfolk and the older boys are constantly busy, trapping and speariiig.fish, and hunting cari- bou, white whale, polar bear, seal ..;id walrus. The women are kept just as busy, dr'.ing the fish as fast as the men catch them. .Another of their jobs â€" and how many of their white cousins would envy them ? â€" is press- ing out oil from the whale blubber ement of chance out of BINGO. In one of the.se, the players come to the game carrying a supply of little numbers exactly resembling those used on the official cards. As the numbers are called by the operator of the game, they simply paste the proper ones on their cards until they have a whole row of winners. The checking is gen- erally done so hastily that the sub- stitutions are seldom noted. * * * In the other /'Ian, the connivanLC of the checker is necessary . The racketeer hollers "Bingo" then Ihe checker .n'lii/i/y comes over and calls off â€" not the numbers actually on the racketeer's card, but nmming ones which he has memorised as the (lauie was progressing. There are other schemes too in fact Ik* author of the article -soys that when any man â€" or woman either â€" wins too consistently at BINGO, the chances ore thai there's dirty work at the crossroads. And so another illusion is shattered! Vott're not rT'CM safe at a Church c 'c- !n: â- â- •iciil. It'« Expected Clerk (to m:uiagi.T of stoic): "When 1 sold that lamp why did you want me to bill him extra for the sImiIc, electric cord, and a hulb:" Managci : "l)h, he's ov-- local automobile dc.iler." with a 'ulu" knife, to provide the winter's fuel. The mighty whale, indeed, is iti many ways a staff of life to the east- em Eskimo. To catch a whale is a communal effort, and it is logical that the community should share its bene- fits. The "corpse" is evenly divided between all the families participating in the hunt, and each section is then put to various uses. Food and oil come from the blubber, as we have mentioned, but if you are looking for an extra special delicacy, there ii nothing more enjoyable than a juicy wedge of the whale's skin â€" at least, so the Eskimo say. An Annual Event Perhaps the isolation of the Eskimo from the rest of the world makes them such cheerfid, jolly fellowt when they do manage to come into contact with other human beings. Stich occasions are rare, but are look- ed forward to eagerly for months ahead. One such occasion is the an- nua! arrival of the Hudson's Bay Company ship the ("Nascopie"â€" the ship that made this trip for so many years â€" wai unfortunately wrecked in the fall of 1947). In the film we sec the "Nascopie" stopping at every settle- ment along the coast. The men aboard her, R.C.C.M., doctors, mis- sionaries and traders â€" are all as eager to see the Eskimo as the Eskimo are to see them. .\s the ship lands, the Eskimo come forward, and work manfully unloading the lumber, gasoline and traders' supplies. The R.C.M.P. and doctors check on health, take out the sick and injured, and learn uf new problems and diffi- culties which have arisen in the lives of these copper-skinned nati\e';. Yearly Shopping Spres The visit to the trading post is an- other occasion for cheer and excite- ii^ent. Furs are exchanged for wood- en sticks, worth fifty cents each, and these sticks are regarded as money. With the sticks the Eskimo buy their supplies of rifles, ammunition, traps, tea, flour, sugar, clothing, matches, and even toys for the children. .Ml in all the Eskimo arc seen to be a resourceful and self-reliant people, who have made their homes in what is possibly the inost rugged and for- bidding region in the world. Far from being dull, they have shown surprising ability in mastering the arts of the white man. "Eskimo Summer" gives an hiteresting colour picture of these people, and includes an animated map showing the precise location of their territory in Can- ada's eastern arctic. The film i« now being shown on the rural circ- uit film programmes in Ontario counties. * Hard Times "These sausages you sent me arc meat at one end and bread-crumbs at the other," said Mrs. .\ndrews. "Yes, madam," replied the but- cher; "in these hard times it is i'"*ficult to make both ends tneat." Learn to Parachute Starting in Reverse It has been pointed out that start- ing at the bottom and working up is a pretty good rule, unless the un- dertaking is that of digging a well. Parachuting might quite reasonably be classed as another trade or pro- fession which is impractical to "learn from the ground up, " says a science writer in the Christian Sci- ence Monitor. However, it is quite possible to start a parachute jump from ground level and without the aid of any type of aircraft or balloon. * * • To overcome one of tlie principal hazards attendant on novice (and otlier) parachute jumps from heights â€" the question o£ whether or not the chutj v/ill open properly after the leap into space â€" a device has been worked out whereby the para- chutist starts his jump from good old Mother Earth. The novice dons his parachute and harness and stands on a grilled plat- form. Under the grill a powerful motor-driven fan springs into action, •ending up a powerful vertical blast of air. The current fills the para- chute and as the cloth mushrooms out above tlie student's head, he feels himself jerked off his feet and into the air. • « ♦ Up and up he goes until his weight exactly counterbalances the force of the vertical column of air, where- upon the student begins his descent just as though he had stepped from a plane. He learns the tricks of handling a parachute, working the shroud Hues to jockey for a perfect landing, getting his training with virtually all of the hazards of the more familiar kind of parachute jumping eliminated. Foreign Trade Suppose we decided to forget all about this headache of foreign trade, as some misguided people suggest, und try to live within ourselves, what would it mean? asks The Financial Post. H. V. Lush, president of the Ca- nadian Exporterr .Association, an- swered that question very plainly recently. With no importing or exporting, he said, immediately 784,000 Canadians would lose their jobs and wage and salary earn- ings would shrink $,^0,000,000 weekly. That would be the direct loss. What would be the effect of such a blow on all other industries, oth- er jobs and other payrolls can only be imagined. T^yr IT" O â€" Modern medical icI- I I j ^ £^^enc6 tiaa overcome ali- ments formerly thou(?ht Inii't'.-^sibio Piles were considered one or them That's nonsense today. The new Pyltone treatment has proven It- self In thouBunds of the most stub- born cases- It gets results because It Koea direct to the Internal caui:e Tour first bottle (a liquid taken by mouth) shows you the difference, or that price refunded at once All modern DrUffBists HAUCK FLAME GUN Dislroys brush, tree H t n ni p s. unwanted urass. splits rocks, tlisin feels, chars wood, heats Iron, melts lead and tar and has hun- dreds of other use-" lor all seasons DISPT. \VI. VUST OFIKK HOX NO, J47. Wlnnlite:: Mnnltoha I'nnndR VsaaSj brings qtiick, su|« relief m coughs, broDchida ana throat irrita- tion*. ASALLDKUOOISIB tSc BRONCHIAL EASE COUGH SYRUP wismATotsor LYMOIDS Classified Advertising BL'81NB80 OPPOIiTCNimB AN OFFER 10 everj luventorâ€" I-l«l of InvM- tloni and full InfomifttloD aaot (fm. TIm R&mwij Co.. Re«l«tered Petent Attonum I?' 3bnk Street, Ottawa. BABV caiCKb Bntftaiid wanta SO million dozen «m from Caiiudu in 1948. The price startlnc lata in Jouuury will b« 60 per duu-'n hlirher than 1047 Spnnir prices. Fait prtcea t>eginiiine Septemljfcr lal will ba -'.'â- a. dozen arxn-e preaent Fall pric«a amJ w:II ctJUitDue uiit:l Januury 'il, 1?49. Y(.-ar la and year out there liHB I)i-en mon«y m Poultry and li»48 wilt b& no exception. Start with aood chickn. VV'h have hut-n supply ing that kind for 24 years. Free Cntaloicue and Prlcellat. TweUdte Chick Hatcberiea Llmltad. FfrsuB, Ont:irlo. PIG Hock F^rm Chlcka are atlil the twat bet on the tarm because they lay plenty of bis efiua and oauke a good oroflt. They are atror.y liveable chU-Ka aired by bl^b eci rocord mulHv, Disoouni on early ordera. Write today lor free caU-miar and price Hat. Bi« Hock Kaiin. MiIIo ttochea. Oni. Baby Chicka â€" Uartud Kucka. mixed and UybMil Il;trred Itock.s â€" -N'ew llatopahirt-a. Mixfcd $i;i CO per louâ€" uiao 5 othtr broeda. Goddard Chick Hatcheries. Britannia fielghti*, Ont. PouUi yk-'-pi-ra â€" you know the tftKni marketa are with you. Don't leave your chick buyinff till the last luiauie. Wa've dayolda and aturlt^ £or prumpi aUipinent. Bray Hatchery. 130 John N . Hamilton. Oni. Monk ton Poultry Chlrka â€" Ifou buy tiaby chicka for one reaaou. To receive dlvl* denda on yoi:r Inveatment. you muat oe cur- taiu where your money la invested. We olU-r you baby chicks from a Poultry Farm wtUi •â-¼sry breedor puUorum tested and governraent banded. Take advantage ot our ear!y dlu* count. Write for our 134S catalogue and price Iltjt. Munkton Poultry Fartna. Monkton. Ontario. All popular breeds are offsretl by Top Notch Chick Sales. Get your order in early â€" rifiht now â€" for a profitable 1948 season. All Top Notch Chicka are from Ciovernnifnt Approved httfh-productive stock. Top Notch Customers come back year afUT year. An order now protects you against poaeible price rise, gives you full benefit of any prlca di"0P before delivery and assures you of getting the breed you want nn the day you want them. Send for catalogue and priceliet. Top Notch Chick Sales, 1 luclph, Ontario. UVEINU ^VO CLK.%MNO HAVE* SOU anything aeeda dyeing or clean- ing? Write 10 ua foi Information. We are glad to anawer your quest ions. Department II. Parker's Dye Works Limited. 791 Tonge Street. Toronto. Ontario t'OB SALlL HARLEV DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLES Parts anu St-rvlce. Gfr' K Kfnneiy A Son. 41U College St Torcnio JOHNSO.M Iron Horse eiib-mea. S H.P. J61.46 1.34 H.P $70.00 Immediate delivery. Cur- rey Biilmer. Eplinton A Buthurst Toronto AMBER HdNEY Very choice. LiKht amber honey, good ke-'p- ing quality. 70 lb. can. $18.60 F.O.B. Fergus. On t F red W . IC rQll^eâ- Feri;uB. Ont. Dt.»RSET horn ewes. Iambs, yearhngs. 2 yra. Canada 3 best breodinB. J. Leigh. I Heath St, W . Toronto. Ont. 5 Lbs. FI.XE QUILT PCS. S1..19 Colorful a«.Hortment, preitiest designs. Guar- anteed washable cotton prints, broadcloth, atunning s'lk onilting patches, assorted sizea. mnkms a i tractive quilts. Preferred selec- tion. $1 50 (20 lbs. $5,L*Sj •â- FKKK": 16 quill depiens: .Needles- Thread. Remiltance with order. Deliv.-ry extra. 12 YDS. REMX.^X r PCS. $1.69 Washable Co:ton Prints. Broadcloth. Pluu-^a, etc. 10" to SO" width, Lineal measure- ments. PostaKe 30c MONTREAL REM .\ ANTS Stallon H. Dcpt. «. .Mnr.treal. MUMCAL aood Advlcal ErtTj nttterw at Palai or NmrlUi abouia ti7 Om** Remedy. Munro'a Drug Stort, itI Klsta. Ottuwa. Pustpaid Jl.OO. INTESTINAL COMFORT. aend OOW. Oil Dollar trial p»cJtami. 3ox tl. TorBBto I. Pep up. Taka C.C *B. ToUc Tableta for la vUalUy. nervoua and reneral deblltty. (^ and II 00 at druiBlaU. or C.C *D.. I Datt au, Hamilton. Ont. Il'a Important â€" T::very aufferer of Rli"uraatl« Paina or Neurllla ahould try IMxoa'S Rtmedy. .Munro'a Drug Store. 33t Elalo. Ottawa. Postpalil 11.00. UPPURTUNITIKS WOK WOMKN BE A HAIEDRESSER"^ JOIN CANADA'S LEADl.VQ SrUOOl. Graat Opportunity Learn (lalrdreasllK rit^aaaiil dlenifled profesalon. cood 'houeands auccpaalu) Marvel vraduatas Ainerica'H ereatcat ayatem [Ilubtrated cMiM^ toBue free Write or Call MAn\'EL HAfRDRE.SSTNO SCHOOLS sea Ijloul .fl W . luicnto Branches 44 K:nE St Hamilton It "4 Rlileau Street. Ottawa Saniia General Hospital School of Nursing Offera a general courae in nuralnx ineetlne the requirements of ihr; Ontario Deparlirit-nt of Health CLASSES ENTKK FKlmL'ART AND SEPTEMBER .\ee Limit â€" lS-35 Yf-ars Monthly Allowance: $25.00 after cuinplelion of preliminary term Maintenance and Textbv>oka Provided -Vfxt Class Win Be .\dmltted February 10. 1948 Apply SLTERINTENDSr.T OF .NLR.^E3 SAHNIA CENERAL HO.SPITAI. OPPORTrXITIES FOR .MEN .4.N b WOME W . KAa.N. Mn.NET AT KOME~ SP.\RE.or full-time money-making. i..eatn ttt make candy at home and earn as yon learn- correspondence cotii-.-i.-. National la- atitute of Confttlionery Hcy'd. Delnrimier P.O.. Uo» 1.';:. Montreal. Que. MEN &. WOMEN â€" "SELL" the NEW sensa- li-.>niil BtiOK on BIBLK PIU>!'HKCI. For tho;ie who are EARNESTLY s'ektnR mor« KNOWLEDGE and TRL'TH froin the BiBI.B BcrlPturfH. Unusual truths bi-oiisht to li-.-ht. ANSWEIt.S many BIEI.F; Bcrll>ltire3 you hava always wanted to know. Atx)ut 100 mrtea. size 6.^9 inches. This ad can't tell all ihe story, never a book befor-* like it. 'Tood commi-nsion to live wire AGENTS. .Saiinfa(>- tion Guaranteed. Price Jl."ri. Order now. Wr'to R. DYE. I.lli.S West 9th Street. Lo« .\niteies 15, California. I'ATENTS FETHEKSTONAl'GH i Company i-al.nt Snllcltnrs Established 1S90 14 Kins vVest, Toronto Booklet o* Informal ion n reitueat. rEItSllNM LONESO.ME' Uomiintic Correspondece \tar- azfne contains, photos, desrripi'ons !(»e. V\';lb addresses 50c Ofie vear (£ World Federation Cub Parkerview. SatK â- 'ELI.1AH C^OMl.SG Rernre Chrlal" wim.lei^ ful hook free MeBiildo Mlasiton. Ro^-hestar II. NY "Kiiow Thyself" Professor Kdwln, sfXTlal counsellor, businesa adviser. Solve your problem?. "07 College. Toronto. Kin-.:sda:e 1091'. G.\RDF.\" TR.\CT(1RS A nil ROTARY TILLERS 1 H to 9 horsepower. Garden Plows, Dlaca. Cultivators. Sickle Mowers, etc. Write: . UXIVERSAL TRACTORS LIMITED Maniifaci'irf IS â€" SuppHera. Bartonville (Hamilton). Ontario. Dobcrmaii E'nppios â€" Sirt-d by Champion Goe- the von Mannerheim. Show proB(>ectB for approved homes Particulars on re«:ue8t. Tannenwald K-'nnels, 53 Vnrkville Ave.. Toronto. Midway 3297. TAX"r"BUSINESS For aale in .<udbury. Ontario. One of Sud- bury's l(*adinK and most prosperous taxi bn.»<ineps with "itiht ?i*^\v rars and all modern otiuipmt'n:. n<'st l«c;ition in city with a lnrK»» i^arat:" and service station. tSO.Ono car:*h or iniymentB can be arraneod. Write Goorse Applphy. 149 Edward Ave.. Sodbury, Ontario, MOST ^tfirlent "Spiral- Pitch" snowplane propelK-rs and sUUb. 15 years experience. .T But;' i:i Tri'lniore, .Snsk. TRAN.STOKMKR station for sale coiiiplDteT consistinj: of 3.100 K.V.A. Ferranti 2.300/ S7S volts: 2 :r. K.V.A. Ff-rrantl 2.300/110- 220 volts: 2 37 14 K.XX. Ferranti 2.300 / 110-220 vi)lt«; I oil breaker. ll.OOO volts. 400 amps, paiii^l mountncl. Box 2, 7S Adel- aide W.. Toronin, SelllMff Load Broke Hois-^s, K0o^l size, Marcb delivery. Would take to district where needed. Write W. Hummel. M.antarlo, Sask. For Snl*' ?'ower Machinery Chain Saw. slightly used, very Bond condition. 3 Mi H.P- Prlcp $"r>0 deltvcrpd. Joseph Bj-me. Woodslc"'. Ontario. DACH.-iHl'NDS. Bl;>ck and tjin.« Keciatered Champion bred stock. Fred. G. Attm.inn, 44 Filberl .'Street. KUohonor. Ontario. TAN'KS^ ToTooo sals. Immediate deltver7< .\Iso otl-or st7.ef on hand. R. St. Germain, 577S St. Lawrence Blvd.. Montronl, Que. 70 TONS baitd hay. 120 per ton^ F.O.B. Brinsion. H. J. Saver. Irocniols. Ont. Pony band mill with 54" wheels. 4*4*' face. 1 2-r>*' band saws, band aeitlnu srlndlng and I tcnsioni!!^ njachtno, small carriage. 36' â- tracks, price $G.")0.0O cash, as is. Walkerton. ^ Apply fioRdon & Cross Furniture Co. Ltd.. Walkertnn, Ontario. resiatered. Lonesome' Wunt romance and marr'a;.;ef Our lartre masazino lists ladies and 'gentlfr- mcn of all tipea and ages, with photcvjraphs. descriptions, etc. 10c a copy. C. C. Club. Department 2. Bos 128, Calcary. Alberta. H'A.NTEI* REGISTERED NURSES VVANTKD for Kencral duty in sixty-flv* bed hoNpital, with full maintenanc- and well equu^ped nurse's r'-s:tl» nee. Salary 5125.00 per munth Apply Suj".. i.ady M^nto Hospital, CochraoM, Oni. LOOK! Two For One Sale Only SL4^) StuifJy. beautifully niriictl Cigar- ette Lighter and .MlW'ool .'Xrniy MtifTler. Lighter altiiie well wortii $L95. BOTH sent l'ostp;iiiI for only $1.49. DOMINION .AGENCIES Box 47â€" Station B, Hamilton, Ont. Cliow-Cliow ifuppi.'n, ! Mrn. O. Unfold. RR \v.?ekH. Wainfloel. Ont. "VIKING" CRBAM SEPARATORS Whether .vou need aiuii'ti imris. a powei drlv«, or a now Lrenni st-paiatoi'. they ate avail- i able at your ioral VIKING denier. We aupply | a friction ( lutrli pulley with all our aloctrlc ! drives and a low stand with our electric < machines, .''ee your ViltiuB dealer or wrlle to us. .SWEDISH SKr..\R.\TOR CO. M.MITKD 720-722 Notre-Danie West. MONTREAL, QLH ^^%i^' HAlRDRKSMNti LBaHN Hairdressing thrt Uohci ison method. Information on request regardlnt elaases. Robertaon'i Halrdresslnit Academy. IS? A va- rus Road, Toronto. EXPOI^ CANADA'S. FINEST CiGARffTEr.i IS.'^UK -I â€" I'.iis POPâ€" A Boner By J. MILLAR WATT HO f/w nor ! â- 1 villi >Ou'RE PAYIN& FOR IT !