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Flesherton Advance, 9 Jun 1948, p. 7

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• ^ » K 1 Â¥ 4 â- * 4 M. < > 4 ^ 4 -V • « 4 » 4 A 4 ^ 4 ^ 4 ^ 4 •< 4 • •« ^ * M^ 4 4. A. * * â-  * V t ^ A jL » ^ « 4 f 1 4 » •r A A. 4 I. y Sports-And One Thing 01 Anothei â- y Frank Mann Harris 1 1 looks very much as though, •re many weeks have passed, folks wUI be referring to Mr. Leo Duro- cher â€" if at allâ€" as "the former ball- player''. In fact we wouldn't be t«o greatly surprised if, by the time these words poke their heads up in print. Baseball wi ' already have de- .cided that it can get along without Lippy Leo just as well, or even better. * * • Durocher will be missed, beyond the shadow of a doubt; but missed after the manner of the old lady whose big family of sons and daugh- ters had all grown up and left her. "Don't you miss them?" inquired a sympathetic visitor. "Don't you want them back?". The 'old lady thought over this proposition for a space. "Yes, I misses 'em and I wants 'em" she slowly answered. "But somehow or other I misses 'em a whole lot more than I wants em. * « * Now we're not going to deny that, in his day, Durocher was a good, scrappy ball-player, of the type that battles till the last out and even afterward. The whole trouble seems to be that he suffers from an occupational disease espe- cially common to athletesâ€" the sort of disease which, unless drastic measures are taken promptly, be- comes steadily worse with the pas- sage of time. Phychiatrists call it "delusions of grandeur." In the bay-rum and canned-heat set we refer to it as "swelling of the noggin". * * * Durocher has recently blasted his way into the ranks of authorship^ move over, Mr. Shakespeare please! â€"with an autobiographical tome en- titled '"The Dodgers and Me"; and it is this volume which, unless all the signs and portents are strictly haywire, will before long be the cause of his permanent divorc; from the game which gave him a full measure of prominence and pelf. And no wonder either. Leo pro- fesses to love Baseball with an un- dying devotion. Baseball might very well reply in the words of the old song, "It's all very well to dis- â- emble your love, but why do you kick me downstairs?" * * « For in his first, and we trust last. literary opus Durocher portrays practically everybodj' connected with the gameâ€" himself and Branch Rickey, in that order, excepted â€" as being more or less closely connect- ed with the genus pediculus, or as they'd phrase it at The .\rts and Letter Club, just plain lousy. Only he and his boss emerge from the morass of Durocher's prose pure and unspotted; and when it comes to Rickey the author daubs on the whitewash and gold leaf with such a lavish hand that it is even more sickening than his smears of a" the others. * * ^ Take, for e.xaniple, his treatment of Babe Ruth, Durocher suspected that Ruth wanted to be manager of The Dodgers â€" a job which Leo doesn't hold at the moment, but for which he had secret ambitions. Words passed between the two. and Ruth threatened Durocher with bodily violence. * • * "I leaped off my seat," writes the author tersely. "We tangled." What Leo somehow overlooks mentioning is that, at the moment of the tang- ling. The Babe was sitting on a chair, and that Leo courageously pushed him into a locker. * * * Frank i Frisch, Bobo Newsom, Luke Hamlin, Burleigh Grimes, Casey Stengel, Larry McPhail, and Uncle Robby Robinson are just a few of the many who are held up to the light by the budding author â€" and the light is always murky and unflattering, to say the least. Even when he profe.«ses to admire a man, there's ever the touch of the tar- brush. "Grimes, although I was strong for the guy, was not exactly a streamlined manager either. He always kept a red handkerchief in his hip pcket and gave his signals with it." is a sample of what we nieaii. . * t " Vou can almost d- * ct the tears in the author's eyes when he de- picts the perfidy of Frankie Frisch, with whom he had been especially palsy. "I felt as if I had been hit on the jaw with a pitched ball," is how he describes his feelings at finding out that Fri.sch wanted to trade hiiu away to Brooklyn. This, from Durocher, who only a few weeks ago traded Stanky to The Braves for no other reason than that Eiklie was too popular with Dodger fans and who â€" at the time of the Frisch incident, was trying to grab off Frankie's job as Cardi- nal's Jiianager. * * * However, you must read it all for yourself â€" some time when you land in a hotel room that isn't even equipped with a (iideon Bible. Space limitations prevent us from giving jpou any more of this masterpiece of ill-concealed venom, back biting and sell-ad\ilation. .As one review- er put it, "When Leo got through he must have had a terrible Charley- horse from patting himself on the back." â€" which just about snms it up. New Power Plantâ€" Crews work hard on the new $20,000,000 Ontario Hydro power project in the northland on the Mississagfi River. On top of Knob Hill workers drill rock for founda- tion of concrete mixing plant. One slip here and a man would topple to almost certain death in canyon." New roads have been built for trucks carrying away the tons of rock blasted from rugged walls between which the river still foams freely. In foreground is newly built bridge. Main dam site is at right in this picture. What Goes On In The World By Norman Blair Russia Does Russia really and truly want peace? That is the $64 question when it co.ai to vvorld affairs; and a highly e.xperienced observer of such things, especially as they apply to th- Land of the Soviets, answers it in this manner â€" "Russia would really md truly like peace â€" for a w! ile '. T'^e goes on to point out the reasons why this is so. Here are some of them. 1. ^he great masses of people do not t war â€" this is as true c ' Russia as of any other nation. After the long and fierce struggle of the last war, their nerves are still o'l edgi and they want a rest. 2. Russia is no more ready for war than the United States. Coal, steel and oil production are still far below the mark; and b cause of shortage of tr s the agricultural output is nothi ig like what Moscow wants. 3. Tho people of the Soviets need a period of rela.xation. There is plenty of dissatisfaction and grumbl- ing â€" under 'le surface, of course, _ regardin the shortage of consumer goods. With a period of peace as- s red, much manpower could be releas ' from the rmed services to help industry and agriculture. Without any wa. , since the V Ita Cinferenc Moscow has been extending its control over the entire area east of the Trieste-Stettin line, t 'le exception of Greece and, to a certain extent. Finland. Entire political and econoniic systems have been s\\ r t away. It would be more convenient for Moscov to have a period of calm i' which to consoli- date ;'!'â-  â-  ehangs. These are som>- of the reasons this observer gives for believing that the Krerrttifr. really wants ^eace â€" for a wh''e7«ut he hasn't mentioned on> that ' ight le more powerful than all these p t together. Rela- tions between Britain and the United States have been strained 1 1 a grievo- degree by what has gone on in Palestine. The Russians are well awarj of this, and are watching t' situation closely, h'-ping* â€" no doubt â€" that the .Arab-Israel wed, wii, drive these two great nations still further apart. With discord between the West- ern .Mli- Russia's chance for real world domi ation would be ever so much better. So perhaps Mr. Stalin was sincere when he said he'd be glad to enter into discussions with the Unite' States â€" maybe he figure, hat, at this juncture, the "waiting game" is the best one for Russii to play. Great Britain M Scarborou" in 'V.'orkshire. the British Labor Party held its third annual convenij -n since coining into oftic- back in July, l')-45. Men and women connected with the move- ment gathered together to take stock, jint with pride, and air their grievances. ..s is the custom with Br'tish political parties. Mor- than 1200 delegates, repre- senting something like five million Laborites. were in attendance; and as a New York correspondent put it, "The men at Scarborough were , no collection of street-corner agita- tors or Socialist soapbox orators^ They felt the .sobering responsibili- ties of office." The mood that characterized the meeting was, in general, one of pride. Statements that full employ- mc!" had relieved the working classes of fears of hunger that hauiitei' it since the industrial re- volution « ere recicved with cheers and applause. In three years Labor had achieved nationalization of the Bank of England, of civil aviation, of transport, coal, electricity, rail- ways and overseas communication. It had passed 'egislation for free rnedical service to all Britons, for reform in Parliamentary represen- tation, together with liberation of India, Burma, Prkistan and Ceylon. .â- \lthough- there were several clashes one group demanded that Britain should "deolare its indepen- dence from the United States", when it came to t'.e close of the conven- tion, party unity seemed strong. Government leadership was firmly in the saddle. But in spite of this, there are signs that Labor may be getting ready to make some conces- sions to the middle-class viewpoint. One of these was in Herbert Morri- son's statement that once the nation- alized programs already under way â€" such as iron and steel â€" are com- pleted, nothing further along this line is contemplated. Such concessions point to the fact t' at 1950 is not so far off â€" and that the heads of the Labor Party realize that when election time rolls around, it will need plenty of votes from outside its own ranks if it is to re- main in power. The Middle East While the British Government says it has no further interest in Palestine e.xcept as a member of the L'uited Nations, actually the British are stiU deeply involved, not only in the Holy nd, but in the entire Mi'MIe East. Tl'ere are, for example, Britain's treaties with Trans-Jordan, Iraq, and Egypt, to say nothing of her close connections with the balance of the Moslem world, stretching through Southern .\rabia and Iran to Pakistan. Involved in some of these connections are monetary sub- sidies, provisions for arms, and the loan of British officers to train and CO" land native forces. Exercising an unheard but still dominant role in the matter is Middle Eastern oil. Then there are the British Imperial bases, starting at Gibraltar and ending at .\den, also t' necessity of keeping the Red Sea, the S'"z Canal and the Mediterranean open to the British Empire. All this means that in the eyes of British Foreign Office dignitaries RELIEF FROM ECZEMA A Lady writM: I hod Ecttmo btMfc oal on my Its and Iritd olmoit wacythlng, bul II did no good. Than I Mtd Mkco and aol i*II*I itoiB th* imuillng, md itching. I cannot ipMk loo highly ol Mkco. MECCA OINTMENT ISSUE 24 - 1948 nothing is of much greater import- ance than the retention of Arab friendship. When forced to a choice in 1939, as war approached, Britain swung to the .^.rab side; and, whether consciously or not, that seems to be what she is doing now. Mr. Bevin for one, never con- cealed his dislike for partitioning Palestine, nor his sympathy with the Arab case. Nor has the Foreign Secretary concealed his resentment toward President Truman and American Jewry, whom he blames for the failure to achieve a compro- mise in Palestine. Only recently the powerful Manchester Guardian said, "One cannot quite avoid the suspicion that Mr. Bevin has a cer- tain pleasure in making things as awkward as possible for the United Nations." Ontario to Have More Game Fish An extensive program of fisheries research is being undertaken in Algonquin Park through the co- operative support of the Depart- ment of Lands and Forests, the L'niversity of Toronto aijd the On- tario Research Commission. The investigation is directed towards an understanding of the factors respon- sible for the produciion of game fish in Ontario's northland waters. * » ♦ For many years the laboratory and resident Park staff liave co- operated in the planting of speckled trout yearlings into a larse number of lakes. Few ins-tances of definitely improved fishing resulted from this procedure. In later years, the plant- ing program has beer reduced to the planting of marked fish iiitfl a few lakes, which did show improvement previously, and the experimentafi in- troduction of fry and yearling, trout into feeder streams, small perman- ent streams in which trout could he expected to remain for, at least a year before moving down to the lakes. DOES INDIGESTION WALLOP YOU BELOW THE BELT? Hdp Your Forsottefl "28" For The ICind (X ReKef That Helpi Make You Rarin' To Go More than tmlf of your diseation ia dona below Lbs belt -in your 28 feet o( bowela. So whao indigeation strikea, try aomethinc that helpa digeation in the atomaoh .VNu below the belt. What you may need ia Cartar'a Little Lirar Pills to gira needed help to that "forvottea 38 feet" of bowela. Take one Carter'a Little Urer Pill before and one after meala. Take tiiein aooordina to direetiona. They help wake up a larger Sow of the 3 main digeatire juioea in your stomach AND bowela â€"help you digeat what you hare eaten in Nature'a own way. Then moat folka get the kind of nliaf thai m&kaa you feel better from your head to yaw toea. Juat be aura you gat the genuine Carter'a Little Liver Pilla from your druggiatâ€" SSat CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING AtiENTS WA.NTED OILS, GREASES, TIRES. iQsectlcldtfs. Electric Fenca Coniroilera. Uuua* and Bam Paint Roof CoatUiKH, «tc. Deal* era wanted WHie Warco Greaaa A OU Llml ted, Toronto BABY CHICKS Pl.'LLIiT BAHUAINS: Now Hampahirea. White Rocks 6 weeka old 56.90. S woeka old. Uarred Hucka Don-aext>d 25.45, puUuta 35.95, cockL'rets 20.96. Lisht Susaex X New Hampstiires, Barred Rock X New Hampshlres non-aexed 25. -16. pulleta 36.95, cockerela 20.95. Also two and four week old hi many breads. Day old cockoreU June prices: Barred Rocka, LUflit Sussex X New Uainpahires. Barred Rocks X New Hampsblrea, Black Australorpa. LiEht Sussex. New Hampshlres X Barred Rock 9.9!;. \Vhit0 Leshoras 1.00. Burred Rock X White Leghorns 2.50. Send for June price- list. Tweddle Ch;|k Hatcher-es Limited. Fer- sua. Ontario. FREE 100 COCKERELS Wilh every order of 100 Leghorn Pulleta we will ijlve 100 Rock .K Le«. Sussex S. Lrfsa. or .v. Hamp .\ Lee pulIetB priced at 26c. HURONDALE CHICK HATCHERY, LONDON. ONT. I'OB SA1.£ HARLEY DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLES Parta and Service. Bert 419 College 8L. Toronto. a Koaaiidy A STARTED ch.cka. imraediute delivery. Re- mt>nil>er. if a not too late to get fall and winter etisa with these chicks. Bray Hatchery. Viii John N.. Hamilton. Ont. 22c â€" Heavy Breed Pullets â€" 20c All heiivy breed pullets 22c. After June 5th- 20c. See other advertisement for particulars. Assorted Pullets 20c. after June 15th' 18c. HURONDALE CHICK HATCHERY. LONDON. ONT. <> WEEK OLD PULLETS: New Hampshlres 55.95. Two week old Barred Hocks. New Hampshire X Barred Rock non-sexed 19.95. pulleta 29.95. cockerels 15.95. Lieht Sussex X New Hampshlres. Barred Rock X New Hampshlres: Non-sexed 19.95. pullets 30.96. cockerels 15.9.'.. 3 week old add 5.00. 4 week old add 13.fJ0 per hundred to above prices. Day old cockerels, June prices: Barred Rocka, Lieht Sussex. Lieht Sussex X New Hampshlres 9 !)'>. White Leehorns 1.00. Lieht Susses X White Leehoms 2,50. Send for June prices. Top -Votch Chick Sales, Guelph. Ontario. BARGAINS HEAVY BREED COCKERELS Thousands availablo weekly Send for special prtceal : Rock x Leehom: Sussex z LeKbom; New Hamp x Leehom Cockerels: 2 1-2 centa. These medium-bred cockerels are Juat the thins for Broilers! HURONDALE CHICK HATCHERY. LON- DON. ONTARIO NO MATTER whether you are raising chickens for the eees they will produce or to sell as broilers or roasters you can make more money If yuur chicks are from auick maturine, heavy layine ancestry. Our breedine stock has al- ways been carefully selected for best results In the laying nests. However, we have not overlooked nor neglected the desired meat Qualities In developing our stock, Tweddle chicks are fast maturing, the kind that you want when purchasing In June. We can give prompt delivery on day old. two, three and four week old In most popular pure breeds and croca breeds. Reduced prlcea for June. Also older pullets eleht weeks to laying. Free catalogue. Tweddle Chick Hatcheries Limited. Fereus. Ontario. CLETRAC crawler tractor, tail Dieael, modfll A. 4-<:yl., used 4 montba. Apply Camost* Lumber Coropaiiy. Port Perry, Ont. HI- POWERED Riflesâ€" Write for descrlptiw folders and prices SCOPB SALES CX>.. 326 Queen St.. Ottawa. Ont. EAT HONEY. Nature's Qnest sweet, we wOl supply a case of 12 four-pound cana of 4m- iicious fine flavored clover honey for OBlf {10.00 Order today while this bargain pHoi lasts Big Rock Farm, Mille Rochas. Ont. 150- ACRE dairy farm. 4 1-2 mllea froa Caledonia on county road. Good briofe hoUi>e. big bank burn. 12 acres bush. Immedl- ate possession. Box 7. Caledonia. Ont. MAPLE Syrup. 1948 crop. Reasonable prlosft. Order early .lohn U Gillespie. AbbotsrorA, Quebec- CONCRETE DRaIn TILE 4" to 16" dia. Continuous supply. BrantCori Buildei-a Supplies Ltd., 4& Bruce St.. Braat- fo rd. Ont.. Phone 139QM. 100 ACRES, suitable for market garden «r tobacco. About 65 acres bush. 350 Iocs cut. Cookstown vicinity. W. E. tCeowa* Grand Bend. Ontario, BOATS 47 New Oeluxe Cabin Cruiser. Sleeps two. Fully euutpiied. Length twenty feet. Spead twenty miles. Ot>er.ition twenty hours. iimjMr extras. Reduced to S2400 Terms. Box Cfil, Parry Sound. COMPLETE Home Insulation Service west «f Brantford. south of Goderich, Free estiinat«a un blown in. Rock Wool or Fiberglas. Uelkar Roofing Ltd., 612 Waterloo, London. FREE 1 large Delphinium with $2.00 orders. 12 beautiful perennial plants SI. 00 wbila they Inst. Dime Nurseries. Route 2, WeUaa^ FINEST Wood-burning brooders made C.S.A. $30.00 delivered. Write for Circular. Flj-nn Importing Co.. 6307 DeVliny .We.. Montreal 3, Que. GERMAN Shepherd puppies, bred from Um World's finest bloodlines. At ^tud. ChBiB> pion steel of Barrlmor. Barriraor Kennele, ISl Barrineton Ave.. Toronto. NAILS Steel, 10.000 kegs available of all sizes. Write for price list. Sherman's Box lOOS. PcwtAl Station "C", Toronto. Can. ~ WAR SURPLUS PAINT J1.T5 i>er eallon and up. .Vll colours araii- able Including white. Manufactured by CLI^.. Lowe Bros.. Scarfe's, Moores. Sherwin Wil- liams. Etc. Write for price list. Sherman's, Box 1005. Postal Station "C". Toronto. Caa. BAIRDRBS8INO LEARN Hairdressms the Robertson metbo4. Information on request regarding cl&saes. Robertson's Halrdressmg Acsdemy. 1S7 4v» nue Road. Toronto MEUIl Al lOy^c â€" Hurondale Chicks â€" ll^/ic Assorted heavy-breed mixed chicks ll^c. As- sorted llght-hreed mixed: 10 He Pure Sussex. Sussex X New Hamps, New Hanips, mixed: 14c. Pullets 2.1c. After June 5: mixed ISc; pulleta 22c. Barred Rock, Rock X New Hamp: 1 3c : after June 5 : X 4c. Rock X Levhom. Sussex X Leehorn. New Hamp X Leghorn, Leghorns; mixed 13c: pulleta 27c. After June 5: mixed 12c. pullets: S4c. After June 15; mixed lie: pullets 22c. HURONDALE CHICK HATCHERY, LONDON. ONT. IT'S HENS In the nesU that pay the bllta. Tour success In the poultry business depends on the quality of chicks you buy. not on tha iiuantity. Tou cannot expect high ear lar- ine (luallties in your pullets unless ther hare high producing parents. It Is only from a strain of layers having high egg laying re- cords behind them, that high producing pullete can come. We offer you this kind of chlcka. Write for reduced prices for June on day old. two. three and four week old chicks. Also older pullets eight weeka to laying. Free catalogue. Top Notch Chick Sales, Quelph, Ontario. 20.000 PULLETS S-lO-12-WEEKS-OLD. TO READT-TO-LAI For delivery In May, June and July. These pullets are not surplus. They have been definitely set aside to meet the big demand for this age of pulleta. All floor raised under the most Ideal conditions! Send for full partlcuars LAKEVIEW POULTRY FARM. WEIN BROS., EXETER. ONTARIO. OVEINO 4ND CLEANING HAVE YOC anything needs dyeing or clean- ing? Write to us for information We are glad tu snswer your questions. Department H. Parkers Dye Worka Limited 791 Tonge Street. Toronto. Ontario FOR SALK ACCORDIONS BUTTON 10 keys 2 bass 21 keys 12 bass %L'ir;jz?.a. 30S Ste. Catherine W Montreal. GOOD ADVICE! Every sufferer of Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis should try Dixon's Reraediy. Munro's Drug Store, 335 Elgin. Ottawa. Poat- paid SI. 00. HUNDREDS ENJOY (iUOD HEALTH from the combination of ingredients used 1m FER-BEK TONIC TABLETS. These Ingredl- ents are being used by medical science to coc^ rect loss of appetite and run down condltfona. U you are tired, listless or run down. -If rom (eel the need of a quick pick up SEND for FER-BEK today, 2 week^ supply postpaid $1.00 BEK HEALTH PRODUCTS Box 26. Station K. Toronto IT'S IMPORTA.NTâ€" Every sufferer of Rba«- matic Pains or Neuritis should try Dlxott'a .ejnedy. Munro's Drujc Store. 335 Blci&. Uawa. Postpaid 11.00. Re Ott OPPOBTUMTlEi* FOB tV»ME?l BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Ureal Opporttinity Lesni Halrdi*esalng Pleasant dlcnlflsd profeasion. good tfaoussDds successful Marvel graduatML Ajnerics's grestest system, [llualrsted cata- logue free. Write or Call MARVEL HAirU^flSSSINa SCHOOLS K I6S aioor St, W.. Toronto Branches: 44 ICing St.. Hamlltoo. 4 74 Rldeau Street. Ottawa. â- ^ PATENTS PETHBRSTONAUGH & Company. Pataat Solicitors. Eatabllabed ISdO. 14 King We«t Toi-onto. Booklet of information on requaai. MARAZZA'S MUSIC SCHOOL Course by mail, with or without inatrumenCa. Write for free folders. P. Marrazxa In«,, 308 St. Catherine West. Montreal H. HELP WANTED CAP.\BLK experienced sirl. general houaa' work, fond of children, private room. Refar* encea. 423 Palmersion Boulevard. Toronto. GRADUATE NURSES For eenorai duty In small hospital. 5-hour d«r. 6-day week. Good salary. Apply "iiiinrliitaM dent, Rosamond Meinorial Hospital, Alnionta. Ont. SINGLE or married man for dairy fa Purebred Hosteins. on 3x and R.O.P. Apply Pomona Farms, Thiiniesford, Ont. "Girls GO for a man with a NUGGET shine*" 'v^u-NUGGET " YOUR SHOES THIS MORNING? POPâ€" Not Well Posted By J. MILLAR WATT mb'5 acrr MO manners ! m« 'WO.v-- i m wa ir **^ \^ »r- M<^ MD LET ,â- .^S eo OVER. 1-**^ FIRST ' â- â€¢â- A-.

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