HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1959-06-04, Page 3RHUBARB SASS—All the elements of a classic rhubarb are
pictured, above, in San Francisco. Guess who won?,, Umpire
Frank Dascoli, naturally. Giants' Wes Westrum (3) found him-
self out of the game after protesting a disputed play, and
manager Bill Rigney waved his hands in vain.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
st
7
STAMPS AND COINS
FOR the finest in stamps on approval.
'Post paid both ways, Write today,
Rideout, Box 4,76, Reuniter), Ont. ,
STAMP collectors send for free pride list, Postpaid both weys. Handle
ten Stamp Co.. 5608 gagra nate- more 12, Md., U.S.A.
UP to $200,00 paid for 1921 Canadian
54, 20-page "Premium Rtrying Guide
allowing prices paid for coins 264, llew brochure "flow to invest in Canadian. Coins M. For both send only 804 to;
Merles, Box 833 4W,P,:Calgary,
A DREAM RAINBOW FOR YOUR ALBUM
A beautiful collection, sports, flowers.
animals, etc„ more than 318 differeni
stamps. Satisfaction for everybody. A that for only 254. With our beautifu
stamps on approval. Fare Stamp go" Dept. W., Stoneham Company, Quebec,
SUMMER RESORTS
BA-Y-VUE LODGE, Lake Muskoka, Bala good swimming, home cooking, close to Dunn's Dance Pavillion, 530•00 weekly. Box 78 Bala. e
GOLDEN • Beach cottages on Lake Nlpissing, near North Bay, safe bath-ing, sandy beach, 11-1L cottages With 2,
3 or 4 bedrooms, For folder write Stan Richardson •Camps, SS No. 1. S. No, 1, North. Bay, Ontario. - -
BLUE WATER CONFERENCE
• NEAR WALLACEBURG, ONT.
"UndenominatIonal Summer Resort',
$3 to $7.50 daily, including meals; all
recreational facilities; evening meet-
ing; Bible and missionary speakers.
For folder write 153 King W., Chatham,
Oat
HOUSEKEEPING Cottages to rent at
Hinterland. Beach, on Kamaniskeg
Lake, Barrys Bay, one, two and three
bedrooms, beautiful sand beach, crys-
tal clear water, good fishing, attractive
cottages. For pictures and information
see Carl. Pitts, Omemee, Phone 108.
PORT SYDNEY MUSKOKA, ONTARIO On Beautiful
Mary Lake
SAFE sandy beach, boating, water
skiing, recreation director. Delightful
woodland walks, FOr a Perfect holi-
day in every way, visit Mary Lake. For
further information write Port Sydney
Tourist Promotion Association.
SUMMER PROPERTIES FOR SALE
BUY Sell, successfully, Port Carling, Muskoka area, specializing in summer
properties Call 51 E 1D Milner Real-
tor.
"COTTAGE for sale in Haliburton High-
lands on Hollow Lake near Dorset, On.
tario. Half acre lot, 100 feet lake front-
age. Lake and Speckled Trout fishing,
good hunting. For information write K.
Miller, 60 Bay St., Woodstock, Ontario.
TEACHERS WANTED
PROTESTANT teacher S. S. No, 12
Chatham Township. Duties to com-
mence September 1959. Maximum
salary $4000. Apply stating experience
and qualifications to Mrs. Leola Sherk,
Sec,-Treas. Tupperville, Ontario.
PROTESTANT teacher for S.S. No. 4,
Yarmouth, Elgin County:. Small school,
all grades.
SALARY, $2,900-$3,108; 'depending on.
qualifications.
APPLY, stating qualifications, experi-
ence, and name of last inspector, to
Mrs. John W. Millman"-R.R. 1, Sparta,
Ont. Duties to begin September, 1959.
TEACHER required for rural public
school for September. Small enroll-
ment,
APPLY, stating salary expected and
experience, to: John A. McLeod, Sec.-
Treas. of Aberdeen-Pltimmer Township:
school area, Leeburn, Algoma Ontario.
TEACHERS WANTED BY •
ORO TOWNSHIP SCHOOL AREA
SALARY schedule, minimum for quali-
fied teacher $3,000 with annual Incre-
ment of 5200 to maximum of $4,000.
Fifty dollars Per year for four years
will be allowed for 'experience.
WHEN applying state experience, age,
religion and name of former inspector.
John G. Currie, Oro Station, Ont.
TOWNSHIP School •A r e a, South
Frederieksburgh requires fully quali-
fied teacher., Comthencing September.
Salary $3,100. State' age, qualifications,
religion, telephone number and name
of present inspector, W, C. Gilbert,
Secretary-treasurer, R. R. 2 Napanee.
3 PROTESTANT teachers for township
school area of Mayo, Hastings County,
starting 1959.60 term,
ONE for one-room school (McArthur's
Mills), Grades I, to V. Salary $3,000.
ONE for principal two-rootn school
(Hermon), Grades V •to VIII. Salary
$3,300.
ONE for junior room, two-room school
(Hermon), Grades I to IV. Salary,
$2;800.
GIVE name and address of last inspec-
tor and experience to A, W. Ramsbot-
tom, Hermon, Ont.
SPORTING GOODS
FIBREGLASS CANOES, "SENECA" 15
ft, 55 lbs, Wilderness Tested. Send for
Free Catalogue of Sporting Goods.
Algoma Sports Shop, 334 Goulals Ave-
nue, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario,
TURKEYS
BROAD Breasted Bronze turkey poults,
largo good market type strain, ileaeon.
ably priced. Circular, Bruntop Turkey
Farb and Hatchery, IL 2, Carnpbellford,
Ont.
ISSUE 33 i•-• 1959
prmfolt-,backache!
-tired out!
-rest disturbed!
ALL s
T
s
• FED UP es
When they tire troubled by backache,
that tired but.feeling or disturbed rest,
Many, many. women turn to Dodd's
Kidney Pills. These conditions can be
caused by excess acids and tristee in
. the System and Dodd's Kidney Pills
Stimulate the kidne ys and aid their
normal action of removing these ittess
ides, and westea, Then life seems
brighteehousework lighter! Why don't
yoU,101), try rieldd'et. ssl
. , ,
.AKT: STAT approoh to; creating, d e;VreitceeTe.
, hal beeb prOpOsed.' It would kepl aleft wtth 'energy
Oy..„1:popirfd. earth,- OrtMintil. depicts seater-like plate'
for
Converted 'heaKin' inuchIhe,eane way, , clrf electric stove
element converts 'elittOrtity to' Under development by
Raytheon, he , itetiona r could be used for
tenti.rentje ..tatiltrfUnieatireri', riaVigiaiiiatitit ion& meteorological
adds,. SarVe'illente and Tv ireinstilissietie
• ,.r` • A ,r4- 4r,r
1„?:i
AGENTS WANTED FARMS FOR SALE
It *We POid John
T9 Advertise.
Some weeks ago, PS Many of . e
yew.will, remember, johnGourd's
wife :lust a prized Old tiereeetiee
fork,, told 0014 this loss:
widely-read celamo. he Wile
.Christian ..Selectee Monitor, rere
kajee y.oi* were wondering. if
there was, any reettenSek Well,.
here's what happened ep to
now!
* *x *
For some weeks I've °Wendered
how to commence this report,
and I suppose the best way is to
stop wondering and begin. It has
to do with three-tined forks, and
It anybody was ever thrust into
Orbit by his own firecracker,
'twas I.
May I underline, first of all,
that there really was a three-
tined steel kitchen fork; that my
helpmate did lose it; that ehe
did say she couldn't keep house
'without it; and that she did be-
seech me to inquire in the ptilie
print where one might apply to
get another, Thus as "Dispatch"
on the subject appeared, and we
hadn't the vaguest notion of what
we were starting.
The truth is that there* has not
been such a spate of response
since your editor and I first cook-
ed up the idea of these Dispatches
—and to me this is a puzzling
thing. Of all the variant topics
we've touched on, pertaining gen-
erally to human affairs, the last
I'd have picked for an all-out
winner would be the three-tined
fork,
And it is embarrassing that
there are so many of you, but
only one of me. When the forks
came by dozens and the letters
by scores, there were a couple of
days of amazement, and then the
throwing of hands in the air. To
all joining in the collective plan-
ning, preparation, making and
distributing of a great family
journal, such response is a joy.
You don't always realize how far
the candle beams, until one day
some such item clicks. But I'm
stumped at finding a way to ade-
quately acknowledge such an
odtpouring.
Even as I contemplated the
task, Daylight Saving came in,
and I lost an hour. Then Presi-
dent Eisenhower proposed , up-
ping the letter stamp to a nickel,
which seemed a personal affront!
And the mail showed no sign of
letting up, or the forks of ceas-
ing to come. Indeed, before the
first letters could be opened,
noted, and appreciated, there al-
ready had arrived one from a
gentleman who said he Had sent
a fork, and as I hadn't acknow-
ledged it, perhaps it had been
lost and he should put a, tracer
on it! (I wrote him at ,once, of
coprse.)
There aren't many places we
haven't heard from—Boston, the
Middle West, the South,. the Pa-
cific Coast, Canada, England (a
couple of forks received from
here were over 300 years old).
There has eveinbeen time to hear
from Australia.
But quite apart from the edi-
torial satisfattion. that comes
from finding such a plural topic,
my "pink ap'n" is a-sing in the
kitchen, a fork in each hand and
another Carmen-like atwixt her
teeth, and she is as happy as a
clam at high tide, as gay as a
banana split, and no task is too
arduous. She can flip doughnuts
again, get pickles from the brine,
and the scrambled 'eggs are
smooth as a smelt.
There were two-three ladies
wrote in and said goodness.
they'd lost their forks, too, and
if perchance we got an over-
supply, would, we share? We
shared, sending to each the name
of the original donor so thank-
you's could be made,
She thinks I should shape up
some pine boards, long panels to
go above the capbaards in the
kitchen, where she can attach the
forks in a permanent exhibit,
She has each laid out with a
tag on it, telling who sent it,
However, Postmaster General
Summerfielcl was careless, and a
few packages came through rim-
wracked beyond identification.
There were also several anony-
'mous arrivals. Some came with
ribbons tied on; many had notes
giving family histories.
Although all were essentially
the same kind of fork, and satis-
fied the definitions, there were
many styles. Some had bone •
handles, some ivory, some wood
—and a few had homemade han-
dles showing ancient repair. Most
showed long years of ose, but a
few were brand new—indicating
they may still be had in stores'
if you know where to, look. And
also, as I said, that money is no
object when the lady of the house
is in want,
Besides all the forks that came,
dozens of letters said, "If you
don't receive one, let me know
and I have one I'll send."
The essence of the whole ex-
, perience, perhaps, is found in the
predorninance of letters :which.
recalled such forks in the hands
of grandmothers, aunts, smooth-
ly doing household chores—happy
memories hitherto neglected.
Some of these letters showed a
refrain . . . wonder wha'tever be-
came of that fork? ,
So, it is gratifying to have
touched on a subject which
pleased so many, and sparked so
many a• tangible response. But
that is` "shop talk," and relative-•
ly unimportant, The .impOrtant
thing is the friendliness; neteh.-
borliness, kindness and concern.
It is as if we had a fraternity,
with the tines standing. for ab-
stractions in triple array.
The 'whole thing has left us'
deeply touched and humble, and
feeling very rich amongst a
broad membership. When the
panels are in place, and the fork
'collection" becomes a dominant
theme in our kitchen (the room
we live in!) it should -be pretty
hard to convince us that an in-
dividual is ever an island, If Ex-
calibur and Durandal and. things
like that have become legendary
symbols of morality, how much
more potent to us will be the eso-
teric values 'of the • three-tined
fork!
, Possibly we can, sooner or
later, eend off our individual
thanks, Certainly we plan to!
Meantime, because we thought
you'd like to know, we have in-
sinuated this Dispatch. We cer-
tainly hope everybody is as hap-
py as we are!—By John Gould in
The .Christian Science Monitor.
They Due1ed • With
Ten-Ton Trucics
The lone girl woke in her sleep-
ing- bag in e glade near Anchor-
age, Alaska, and in the early
morning light saw . . . four vastt,
furry brown legs and feet with
great long curved claws.
The ' huge bear had come out
of the trees and was some twelve
feet way, moving his great blunt
head from side to side. He seem-4
ed as large as a horse, shifting
his weight gently from one front
paw to the other.
Suddenly he'l reared up to peer
at her over, 'entervening twigs.
, She moved her head to keep him
in view, andi the movement may
have startled him, for he drop'-
pert back, turned round and
padded silently away,
Adventurous Lorna Whishaw,,
a British Columbia housewife,
doesn't say she was scared,
merely that . . . "I wanted tit
leap up and yell, to let the world
know Ihad seen a bear, a great
Alaskan brownie."
She „ had hitch-hiked 2,67,0
- miles ftom her home on Lake,
Kootenay. Her geologist husband,
committed to a three' mantilla
expedition', had urged her to go
off sortieWhere on her own,
So she'deleft house and childeen
in the charge of a neighbour and
set-out blithely with a pack- and
thirty-six 'dollars to hike 'and get
lifts up the,•Trans-Canada and
Alaska Highways.
The first truck driver who
stopped' for her warned, her
"Highways airilt no place -. Mr
dames on the 'loose," and• told
her of a coulin's girl who'd gone
-off like that 'and been Murdered.'
"Never' go along with any truck- -
er who asks you," he added.
"Type you need is the guy who
don't Want to take you; then
you'll be okay."
One truck driver — Jack
Martin — deaf after an air crash
when he was a pilot in the Far
East, but the best driver on the
road — exclaimed: "Oh, the
luck!" on seeing another ten-ton
truck on the road ahead signal=
ling madly. "Now you'll meet my
buddy. You just wait, youl ll
really eee something."
The next few minutes, Mrs.
Whishaw say$ in "As Far As
You'll Take Me" were the mast
.terrifying of her life. Jack pails-
ed on a hilltop; -the other truck,
on an opposite hilltop, did like-
wise.
Then, with a blaze of signals,
like joustling knights, they roar-
ed down towards each other,
head on, at ever-increasing speed
— Jack yelling like a maniac,
pulling on the siren, jumping Op
and down on his seat. She grab-
bed at the door` to jump for her
lifee "Sit, you 'fool!" he screech-
ed, seizing her by the hair.
With roaring, blinding death
only , a few feet from thexn the
other- truck leapt across the high-
Way. Jack, with,a yell of tri-
umph, swerved eft and they
flashed past each , Other on their
respective rights.
A wild = jolting' kept Jack's
truck from the left-hand gutter,
and brought it to a halt on his
mien side of the teed. Both
ere, leapt mit and ran to greet
each other.
"What's the idea?" she gespclen
shivering and sweating, when
they were again on theie wayl
"The idea is to doss and pass
MI the light.. Whoever.chickens
(funks) creases first. He did, Yeti
see?' Boy, he thought he'd had
it,"
"StIppose he'd. decided not
ehkkene .thert.Wha0"
q`fieY linikay'sdohe fok.fim,
"The/V.11e would :have had it,"
Jack added. When she said, "dne
of .these days , ." he retorted;
'.'Sea Whet, WS an honietiratie
death;,ain't itt"
Later, on • her return joulreyi
south, :she'd heard that he'd been
killed in an accident.
Qne bight, with another drive
er, she was taking, turn at the
wheel. when suddenly he awoke
arid groped wildly behind the
seat, breathing hard, "I've lost
that big spantapv," lie said,
"I think I saw it under the
seat, just by your feet," she re-
plied, her heart hammering with
a terrible fear, kle found it,
dropped it behind the seat, then
sat very still, breathing heavily,
She feared she'd never see the
light of day.
Some time later he took over,
but his movements were slow,
heavy, nervous. In tit, first grey
light he rasped suddenly: "I
Wonder if you realize that you're
a very lucky young woman
Lucky to be alive. . Had you
been a different woman, who
knows what horror would have
befallen us? if you had lied
about the spanner, or shown
fear. , „ You knew from the
beginning, didn't you? Those
cool eyes saw right through me.
It shows," it always shows, no
matter how hard I try to act like
everyone else."
He explained that last night he
knew he had an "attack" 'com-
ing on, He'd been treated for an
alergy which brought out a hor-
rible rash all over his hands and
gave him "attacks" during which
dreadful things happened. The
last time he'd been tied up and
taken to an asylum, but escaped.
Mrs. Whishaw dropped off
in the Yukon on the way back
to go otter-trapping and wild
sheep hunting in the mountain ,.
with a game warden. At Car-
max, near Dawson City, she met
Mrs. Jane Fletcher, now nearly
eighty, who'd been dance-hall
girl "Rosie Murphy" in. Dawson
in the gold-rush days and still
hoarded away several •thousand
dollars' worth of jewels and.
valuables in a cigar box.
Near Kluane lake Mrs. Whi-
shaw was shown an abandoned
homestead which looked as if it
had been rifled by bears, for
everything was overturned.
"The 'place belonged to a man
called Brown," she was told. "He
had a wonderful wife, a pure •
Eskimo. She had his children
and ,..slaved for him for forty
yeari, never saying much and
taking' all the miserable treat-
ment he handed out.
"One day, when the family
were, all grown up., and left
home, she waited for him oppo-
site the front door. When he
came in, She shot 'him. dead with
his gun. Then she took the bus
to Whitehorse 'and gave herself •
up to the olVfaunties. She was
tried for first-degree:Murder,•and
, acquitted.;?'
lqivaring home, -Mrs. Whishaw
:told"- her "last .'trucker: "Thank
you, Mitch. Thank you ,and, all
the drivers. Think yon' for be-
ing so good to rrie. Thank you
for all you have -taught me."
Fishing That
Is Dangerous ,
Australian anglers ..are liable
to shocks seldom ,met with; •in
Canadian waters. twenty-two-
year-old Keith Bellamy was
fishing beside his twin brother
,Jack, in Coffin Bay, South Aus-
tralia, when there was a mon-
strous tug as a big fish struck.
Harnessed to his long tuna pole, '
Keith was dragged off the 200-
ton fishing vessel, Tacoma, and
into the sea.
The monster raced away, vir-
tually reversing the normal fish-
ing proCess. The skipper turn-
ed the boat about but by this
time Keith had disappeared. He
had been wearing waist-high
rubber boots, and they, to-
gether with the heavy tackle,
helped to drown him.
A shock nearly as drastic be-
fell two anglers while fishing
from an open 14-ft. dinghy off
Melbourne. Suddenly, a shark
leapt straight out of the sea
and into their boat.
For a few seconds it threshed
savagely, and the anglers had to
fight for their lives to ternain
in the boat, Eventually, how-
ever, they captured the unex-
pected intruder.
Because of its poison sacs,
Australian swimmers dread the
stone fish nearly as much• as,
man-eating sharks. The fish
looks like an inoffensive lump
of rock or slab of coral. But
its stihg causes agonizing pain,
resulting in death if there is
no quick medical treatment. An
antidote has now been developed.
MERRY ' MENAGERIE''
"011, revoem lasse en/eq..
egfeee When 112 h'kra •
heel"
leione tese In your spare 'rime, Just show your friends our Christmas and
Ail-Occasion Greeting Cards (including
*Beiges), Stationery, PIUS. Write for samples- Colonial Crud, etile queen, east, Toronie 2.
wevestmAN .Peal estate requires farm agents in your locality, Ole n
Bloor W,. Torento,, WA,. e...eeee,
co INTO BUSINESS.
for Nourilelf. Sell our teclen House.
wares, watches. and. .other products net
found In stores, No ceritectition, Pee-
fits up to eV% Write tiele for free peeler , catalogue and separate genie
ftenijai Y[4 410600- Oleo sheet. Murray 2122 $t. Lawrence, Montreal,
BABY CHICKS
Ire time to order Bray Jely.AugUst broilers. special prices, on dayold heavy breed cockerels, Prompt ship-
moat ueeeld and some started deal pur-pose pullets and cockerels. Some Mites
Millets, also Leghorns, See local agent,
or write BraY Hatchery, 120 John
North, Hamilton, Ont,
BOYS' AND GIRLS' CAMPS
CHILDREN'S CAMP fox boys and girls
6.17 A11 land and Water sports under college•tratned leadership. Registered
Nuree, Home cooked meals Six Ponies
and horses to ride at no extra cost.
Screened insulated cabins. Aqua plan•
ing and Water skiing. 20th veer for
Canada's oetstanding Camp. Highly
recommended, Reasonable, Dr and Mrs,
Martin, Directors. Write for; free fol.
der: "Wildwood" Vaudreuil Ouebeo,
MARIDAN RANCHO
BEAUTIFUL scenic location. Miles of
riding trails. Children 6.16 years, $25.50
weekly. Best of supervision. write an. i, Varney. Phone Durham 580W2.
Ranch
Arrowhead
ONTARIO'S FINEST RANCH CAMP
A wonderful western holiday for boys
and girls 6 to 16, July and August;
adults, May, June, Sept, and Oct. Com-
plete camp program; fees include
daily riding, 'instruction and trails.
"Write for illustrated folder - R.R. 3,.
Pollingwood, or phone Toronto EM. 8-
6548.
BUSINESS PROPERTY FOR SALE
BILLIARDS and cigar store, sound
established business, building and all
equipment included. Located in thriv-
ing town between Toronto and Hamil-
ton. Books open to genuine buyer.
Owner retiring and will give good
terms and hold 5% 1st mortgage. An
excellent opportunity . Call or write
W, D. Hitchcox, Realtor, 541 Brant St.,
Burlington, NElson 4-2343.
FOR Sale - Machine Shop, Woodwork.
ing Shop, living apartment, in the pret-
tiest town in Ontario. Reasonable. No
triflers please. Box No. 186. 123.18th
Street, New Toronto, Ont.
HARDWARE Store and.,/ or Heating;
Plumbing, Tinsmithing Business 'In in- '
dustrial town. Reasenablet,, Apply Box
367, Perth, Ontario. •
GARAGE
WONDERFUL :opportunity in a „grow•
ing induStrial town, 40 miles from
Toronto and a possible franchise with
one of the big three .car manufactur.
• era. Corner lot 145' M 432', on a main
• hightvay',11frough -town:, Garage build-'
ing'45' x •Br, plus:an. addition 20' `x-30'.
consisting. of showroom, workshop,
.office,t'etocicroonr, • 2. hoists and • pit.
Heated with hot.•:water •-by oiL Este)),
lished 14 years. Aggressive car dealers
or garage operators sheuld investigate-
this 'Business.: Wm. 3. -McLeod; Real
Estate Broker, Acton Ont. Phone 203..
HOw Can I?
By Anne Ashley
Q. How can I make- poached
eggs hold together?
A, Add' half a teaspoonful of
vinegar' to poaching eggs, and it
wily cause them to hold to-
gether. This will have the same
effect on fish.
Q. How can I keep the colours
'in chintzes from running?
An aspirin added to the , wa-
ter in which chintzes and cre-
tonnes.- are to be laundered will
prevent the colours from run-
nirig, and even' improve them.
Q. How can I make cleaning
fluid odourless?
A, Add a few drops of oil of
sassafras to each quart of fluid
used in cleaning clothes. This
will deodorize it and entirely
remove any disagreeable odour
from elle garment after the
cleaning.
Q. How can I get rid of moths
in rugs?
A. If the rugs are sponged
frequently with hot water to
which a. little turpentine has
been .added, moths will not re-
main long in the rugs. This
treatment also brightens the
colours of the 'rugs.
Q. •How can I 'improve ehe
looks of an umbrella that is
beginning to look shabby?,
A. Open it and wash 'it with
a brush dipped in ammonia wa-
ter, Rinse undet the thoWee or
with a hose. Open to dry.
Q. How' can I make a tilollth•
Wash?
A. By mixing twenty drops
of tincture of myrrh in forty
teaspoonfuls of Water. This so-
lution IS both healing and
cleansing.-
Q. How can I prevent tooth
decay?
A. A pinch of baking :ioda
used on the toothbrush as a
dentrifiee wiyi act as a prevail-
tiVe decay. of the teeth.
HoW can I brighten a dingy
rug?
A. After a rug has been tiler,
oughly Cleaned and placed on
the Floor, 'amid• it 'stilt,
dingy, faded look, get a an of
warni 'water and put a cup'
Vinegar • and a teblespeonftil 'Pi
strilmonia' into it. Weirig: a wool=) „
len cloth ” out of the water eteid
wipe the rug all Over, Both
kid and ammonia have a ten.-
dency to restore faded COloUrti
FARM for sale -.- 200 acres, good clay loam, new hank harp, milk contract, trout river through •farrn, 7 149.91B house, hydro, spring, water. Close to
Ourch, Acho01, tourist lakes, ;i8055 down. Lustig Flewis, Gravenhuret, (kit,
HANOVER area; 100.acre farm for paler goad buileings, bydro, pressure eye, tens; good waf er; 15 acres bush, 85
acres cleared land, spring-fed stream,
Will sell with stock and implements or
without. Miss Clark, 690 Eglinton E.,
Toronto. Empire 13-3871,
GARDEN MACHINERY
PLAIILT Jr, Garden tractors, tillers,
seeders, wheel hoes, John C. Graham
Co., Distributors, Leamington, Ont. —
HELP WANTED WOMEN
$EW at home in your spare time in-come unlimited. Send, 504 for inst ruc-
tions today, North Star Products, P,O,
Box 112, Dept, F., Cedar Dove, N. J.
MALE AND FEMALE H—E1•:P WANTED
FOREIGN Job Reports; Highest: wages.
Free Travel, Adventure, Men, women,
unusual opportunities. Skilled, unskill-
ed, all trades, OnlY $1.00, Universal
Researcher, Box 4912, Baltimore 20,
Maryland,
INSTRUCTION
EARN more! Bookkeeping, salesman. ship, shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les-
sons 500. Ask for free circular No, 33,
Canadian Correspondence Courses, 1290
Bay Street, Toronto,
MAGAZINES
TEACHERS', Educators', M.D.'s, Dent-
ists' magazine subscriptions, Lists free.
Postgraduate Medicine, year, 510, 2
years, $17, S. D. Rapp, ' szeeeih, Santa
Monica, California.
MEDICAL
WANTED - EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEU-
MATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS TO TRY
DIXON'S REMEDY.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
$1.25 Express Collect
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping skin troubles.
Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you. Itching scaling and burning ecze-
ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot
eczema will respond readily to the
stainless odorles ointment regardless
of how Stubborn or hopeless they
seem.
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE $3.00 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
2865 St. Clair Avenue East
TORONTO
NURSES. WANTED
ENJOY the atmosphere of a friendly
640-bed Down-Town hospital.
THE TORONTO WESTERN HOSPITAL
39e Bathurst Street
Toronto
has vacancies for
GENERAL STAFF NURSES
$255.00 per month 'at present .with
nual Increments to $285.00.
40-hour 5-day Work week
WRITE giving full details to: Director
of Nursing Service.
Hospital Superintendent
REGISTERED nurse-for 30-bed Modern
hospital, starting July 1, 1959. 'Furnish-
ed 3-roorn apartment provided.'•Reply,
stating previous 'experience and salary
expected to Mrs. R. E. Linton, Sore.'
tart'. Englehart and. District' Hospital
Board. Bois 609 Englehart,pnt.
GENERAL DUTY NURSES
FOR 100-bed hospital, up-to-date fact•
titles in a beautiful location on the the
shore of Lake Erie. Residence avail
able. Salary $260.00 month with recog-
nition for P.G. courses. 44-hour week at
present.
APPLY
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
Port Colborne
General Hospital
PORT COLBORNE, pNT.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great. Opportunity
Learn Hairdressing
Pleasant, dignified profession; good
wages. Thousands of successful
Marvel Graduates
America's Greatest System
Illustrated Catalogue Free
Wteor Ca11
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING6 SCHOOL
358 Bloor St, W" Tbronto
Branches:
44 King St., W., Hamilton
72 Rideau Street, Ottawa
PERSONAL
MY RUPTURE was removed naturally.
For FREE FACTS, write: John Mor-
timer, Box 128 W, Elora, Ont,
PHOTOGRAPHY
SAVE! SAVE I SAVE!
Films developed and
12 magna prints in album 600
2 Magna prints In album 400
Reprints SO each
KODACOLOR
Developing roll $1.00 (not including
prints). Color prints 350 each extra,
Ansco and Ektachrorne 35 mm. 20 ex-
posures mounted in slides 51,25. Color
prints from slides 350 each. 'Money
,refunded in full for unprinted nega•
fives,
FARMERS' CAMERA CLUB
130X 31, GALT, ONT.
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
FOR"sale Or trade, service station add
garage, Billy equipped, in small Village
near Napanee. Good location and busi-
ness, Apply - James Ferguson, ILL 1
Napaiiet, 920 r 22.
50 ACRES of timber. 15 acres with
three houSes, large barn, pressure
system, bath room. John H. Parks,
Bannockburn.
IF YOU WANT IT —
YOU' CAN HAVE
Wheleseirie Healititill Year Round
Odorless and rapid, Sanitary Elirriln.
• atieretlearilifieSS Of Ontarits In Out-
door Toilets = SeOtle Tanks Cats
by accepting -eta. 'anklet
leodtittbey offer Of two MiOnder
SpreMi's "SEPTI.K-LEEN" for Otill/
• 43.00
'
Toronto. An imezlne fast
• skeins Compound HARMLESS to. Hu-
mans Pete metals or "inaferiali
Jrist•Treeenfly become aiailabls fee',
distribution. •The fast,„aisfe,ederleite'
• retiiiTS 'Will 'mike yritrolid' yen' did.
inquiries solicited from .Agents and
tlealere,
:CHEMISTS
.164 *ono* -St — Tertonte
till: 3.5147
SLEEP
ONI RELIEVE NE110401111
-ii3O!",terusliorFifportia,eit Idttntighult1,18126:1114.41ii‘e
Sedichi tablets eietvirrillif to dtriethei.
SEDICI A N„r
•
$1.00 —$4.0
brig Stem OW
el,