The Brussels Post, 1960-06-16, Page 7CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Not Double-Talk
But Sounds Like It
Smelting In The
Dark Of The Moon
Smelts run every spring, and
every spring. I find myself with
an urge to go and see. Yet I
don't go, and I guess I didn't
realize the difference betwixt
then and now until somebody
said the other day, "Of course,
we walked when we went smelt-
ing," It is true, and it is the
difference. I remember stagger-
ing home under the weight of
a bag of smelts on my shoulder,
feeling my way in the dark
over roots and stumps.
Sometimes I could go all the
way home without setting the
bag down for a rest. So we did
walk to the smelt brook, and I
can see that it made a difference.
The smelt, a spring spawning
fish of great delicacy, is able to
live his whole cycle in fresh
water, but the ones we went
after were the sea-run kind,
coming up from the ocean in
prodigious numbers to spawn in
the chill fresh water of the sea-
sonal runoff. The fresh-water
smelt seems to run a mite lar-
ger, but the sea-run kind outdoes
him in flavor. A mess of smelts
was always a springtime must.
And man has, from the reddest
Indians, gone every spring to take
these fish as they move up in
their pattern of reproduction.
As you view the thing in
general, there are two kinds of
fishing - commercial and sport.
Smelting is the only branch of
either which laps over to the
other, combines the two so there
is no difference. This, probably,
is because it comes in the spring
and takes on the wistful, force-
ful complexion of some ancient
pagan ritual whose stated in-
cantations have outlasted the
purpose. At least, I know there
is a willy-nilly response that
strikes me every year at smelt-
ing time, although I no longer go.
We did walk. True, there were
automobiles by my time, but we
lacked roads. At smelting time
our poor country lanes were hub-
deep in mud, and people still
knew how to walk. We liked the
night tide of the dark of the
moon - which- sounds pagan
enough until you reflect that we
liked it only because the smelts
liked it. That's the way with a
lot of things - you think man-
kind does something out of fear-
some inner urges, lost to thought
and bordering on the occult, and
then you find it is nothing of
the sort. It takes both men and
smelts for this vernal orgy, and
the smelts run thickest on a dark
tide.
Today hordes of smelters
gravitate to the stream from
even hundreds of miles away,
each bringing a pail for his har-
vest, and the cars are parked on
firm shoulders for a mile on
each side of every bridge and
culvert.
We walked, long-poled nets on_
our shoulders, communing in a
fellowship as we went along ac-
cording to our ancient ritual,
moving by families and neigh-
borhoods ,toward the brackish
tide. Any voice out of the dark
was somebody's. IT you heard a
splash down the brook, a coarse
cry of chilled dismay, and then
a flurry of haw-haw's, you could
tell who had fallen in and who
thought it was funny. Now you
can smelt all night among
strangers and hear no familiar '
voice except your companion's,
And it does make -a difference. -
What was a tribal rite, secure
among intimates, now belongs to
transient infidels as well. They
have the legal right, of course,
and must not be denied their
"recreational" privileges. B u t
they are intruders in fact, for
they look upon smelting wholly
as a sport and lack the deeper
nuances of springtime and the
mysteries of the dark of the
moon,
You have no idea, unless
you've experienced it, what a
Maine brook feels like on a
black full-tide in the dark of
MERRY MENAGERIE
"Oh, he'te the dunce Of the
femileq"
el(
'Double Deuce, your pigeons
at home plate is zero nines zero,
One five miles, Strangle Your
parrot and go three three five
point eight for a GCA pickup
Over the. range."
What does it meant It isn't
double-talk. It is a coirimon, and
straight-faced radio transmission
to the pilot of an airplane,
The airplane Serial number
ends in "22," and he is being told
-that he should turn east and
travel 15 miles to reach his air-
port, lie is being asked to turn
off his r a d a r identification
equipment and tune his radio to
335.8 megacycles to begin a
ground-controlled approach for
landing when he is over the
radio range station,
The language of a pilot is
daily becoming more difficult
for his friends on th,e ground, to
understand.
As the air around us crowds
with airplanes, traffic jams
would occur aloft near every
major airport in the country if
pilots took time to explain their
requests and make their reports
In the same language their
brothers use on the ground. So
they use a shorthand language
to speed things up. r
For instance, a pilot may want
to say something like this; "Los
Angeles control tower, I am the
pilot of the first in a group of
four airplanes flying under the
call sign "Checkmate." We are
beginning our landing pattern
Approximately three miles from
-the end of the right runway of
the parallel runways aligned on
a heading of 250 degrees. We are
flying at the prescribed altitude
end are going to come to a com-
plete stop,on the runway.
By the time the flight leader
finished saying something like
this, he would practically have
had time to land his ,airplanes,
walk to the tower, an give his
message to the controllers in per-
son, writes Richard Bach in The
Christian Science Monitor.
Instead, as his flight turns in-
to the pattern, the leader takes
Live seconds and says, "Los
Angeles tower, Checkmate ie
turning initial three out with
four, two five right for a full
atop."
Abbreviations play a big part
1n the language of pilots. VOR,
ADF, TACAN, DME, and ILS
all refer to navigational radio
equipment aboard an airplane.
CAT, MAP, TOP, OAT, and IAS
refer to information read from
the a i r p Ian e's instruments.
Weather can go from CAVU
(ceiling and visibility, unlimited)
to WOXOF (indefinite ceiling
zero, sky obscured, visibilty
zero in fog).
Some abbreviations don't make
sense, though, even when they're
spelled out. If you visit, a con-
trol tower, you may hear a pilot
request the tower operator to
"cancel my item fox."
Far from bringing disappoint-
ment to a point-nosed Reynard,
"item" and "fox" are letters in
the phonetic alphabet, and the
messages becomes, "cancel my
IF."
It still may not make much
sense. Given the clue that IFR
stands for instrument flight
rules, we see that he could be
saying, "Cancel my instrument
flight," which is almost Correct.
In English it means, "Cancel my
IFR flight plan, for I am out of
the clouds and have the field in
sight."
Of course that takes far too
long to say, and the message
remains, "cancel my item fox."
N the airways grow much
more complex, the language of
!lying will need its own diction
ail and take its place with Urdu
and Swahili, intelligible only
to those who have studied them
for years.
How Can I ?
by Roberta Lee
Q. How can T make a simple,
harmless, and effective whitener
for my dainty curtains and fine
linens?
A. A tablespoonful: of pow-
dered borax, added to the final
rinse water, will do this.
Q. How can I remove white
rings left on a table top by too-
bot- dishes?
A, Place a few drops of cam-
phorated oil or sweet oil on the
ring, let soak in for a few Min-
utes, then polish off with a soft
cloth,
Q. liow cAn I some Of
My copper titensital
A. MiX a cupful of flour and
a tablespoon of salt to a paste
with some vinegar, then rub this
over the article with a soft cloth,
and polish with a bit of flannel
or chanioia.
Q. Wliat can I do wheti the
wax polish On my furniture be-
gins to look sneaky?
A. This is the time to re-
Move the old wax that's gotten
mixed With dirt and has collect-
ed on the surface, Mild soap and
ltikeWarni water will Serve the
purpose, but don't let the soap
remain on the furniture for any
length of time, Be sure, also, to
polish or rewax the furniture
immediately after the washing,
Obey the tr - they
are pieced' 'Urn' r.r.f. YOUR
,SA1%.,TY,
IPA
the- Moon during a smelt run,
Coming forth from a misstep.
washed pure in these rites is not
a happy ,experience, You elimb.
dripping up the bank sand it is
hard, to understand what all your
good friends are laughing at.
And on top of all this,. I don't
like smelts much anyway, and
would j.1,5t as lief have a boiled
,egg,
So it's a little hard in the
per.veetive of, and chang- •
ed, times to look back on smelt-
ing as the greatest thing that
ever happened,
:I3ut I do know this;. That every
year on the dark of a spring
moon, now that I'm living hack
from the coast, there COMES an
inner and. unbidden thought of
smelting, All those who have had
the tides in their lore, however
far back in the highlands they
may move, know that the breeze
stirs a certain way at the change‘
The gigantic force that moves the
oceans in regular rote is always
felt in .the air for those who
knoW of it.
And while for months on end
I never notice this recurring sig-
nal, I do notice it at smelt time,.
I would light the symbolic flame
and depart for the temple. I
would join the generations that
moved from the forests to the
sea to greet the returning sea-
son - holding the smelt as a
harbinger and a promise. I
would answer the summons.
I don't go. But it may answer
some philosophies that the sum-
mons is still heard. By John.
_Gould in the Christian Science
Monitor.
Elvis Is Modest
In A Big Way
The twelve pretty starlets had
been shooed away from the vic-
inity of the great man in the
shower for fear they would be a
disturbing influence. The show-
er had been started, with cold
water that would not streak his
make-up, and the fake steam had
been turned on. Then the pre-
recorded music began and, in the
latest switch on Hollywood's fa-
mous star - in - the - bath scene,
Elvis Presley started Mouthing
"What's She Really Like?"-one
of the eleven songs he sings in
Paramount's "GI Blues,"
In his first movie after two
Army years in. Germany, ex-Ser-
geant Presley was playing, of all
things, a soldier stationed in, of
all places, Germany, ' The side-
burns and 15 pounds of flesh
were gone, but otherwise it was
just like the old days-Oceans
of hubbub washing over the star
who, as long as he wasn't sing
ing, remained quiet, deferential
and serious.
After the shower scene, Elvis
changed into uniform and walk-
ed toward his luxurious dressing
room several blocks away, an-
swering "Yes, sir" or "No, sir"
to the questions put to him by
underlings along the way. He
strolled through an anteroom
where half a dozen young men
lounged in sport clothes-some
of the nine pals he had brought
from Memphis to Hollywood in
a private railroad car (the trip
cost him $2,424). The friends
were variously carried on the
payroll a s "valet," "security
guard," and "accountant" ("He
was a bookkeeperbefore he went
in the Army," Elvis says defen-
sively of this last functionary).
"If'you don't mind, sir, I'll just
keep my hat on while I eat,"
Elvis said, glancing at the air
conditioner in his dressing. room.
"I got to keep this hair in place
and I might catch a chill after
that shower."
He began munching on un-
buttered roll ("A lunch makes
me sleepy") as he was asked
about his Army stint. "I learned
a lot about people in the Army,"
he said, "There was all differ-
ent types, never lived with,
other people before and had a
chance to find out how they
think. It sure changed me, but
I can't tell you offhand just how
"I never griped. If I didn't
like something, nobody knew,
excepting me, Nothing bad hap-
pened, If I'd 'a' been what they
thought, I'd have got what was
coming to Me. But I never talk-
ed about show business. T went
along,"
He was asked about his.future
plans.
"I'm ambitious to become a
more serious actor, but I don't
want to give up the music bus-
iness by no Means," he said. "I
can't change my style, either. If
I feel like moving around, I still
move. As for the fans, they've
Changed some but they're still
there, the same ones, The presi-
dent of one fati club'came to see
me and I hardly recognized her.
She's going to college now. I was
surprised she looked the up. She
was more mature, but she stop
ped by anyway."
The door burst open and a
huge Platter of tuna-fish sand-
WaS borne in, followed
eagerly by the pals. - Pretri
NEWSWEEK.
It coats Mere note just to amuse
a child Watt it homed Sat cost 'to
educate his clad.
OFFICIAL SEAL - Looking as somber as a judge, the dignified
old seal checks-the outside world at Miami Seaquarium.
QUITS CUBAN DEAL — Former
heavyweight champ Joe Louis
tells newsmen that he has sev-
ered all connections with the
Cuba-n Tourist Bureau. He also
revealed that he would with-
draw as a partner in the public
relations firm that obtained the
$287,000 contract from Fidel
Castro 'unless it drops the Cu-
ban account. Louis said, "There
is only one decision I can make
. My record a-s an American
Is as well known as anyone's
and I mean to keep it that way."
FOR SALE
SUMMER CAMP
LAKE HURON
Accommodations on 5 acres near Port Elgin to sleep, feed and entertain 100.
WRITE H. AL TON CIIAFFEE
BROKER
ass latt,Lwoon R.D. Toronto 7, Ont.
ISSUE 25 — 1960
AGENTS WANTED
MEN and women nemoristo.te and sell
oar 011w Jiffy Electric Teapots. FreO, demon ,ttator to persons with, refereti- J n ribert .Agerletes, e'er mouth, Nova Scotia. •
• •
ARTICLES FORR SALE .„ .---
PDEsTitoyeete for use in outdoor toil-
ets. Eats down to the earth, saves cleaning. Directions, Thousands of
users, emit. to coast,' Price $1.00 per ran, postpaid, Log Cabin Products, Ogg York Road,• Ontario,
•BABY CHICKS •
NEW low prices on Bray eleyold and started chicks, prompt shipment. See local agent - or write Bray Hatchery, 12e John North, Hamilton, Ont.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
leg cream, sent Irweetigele the pos. sihnities in this tremendous business. Can be installed in, your present store In addition to your regular business, Small Investment; large profits. Box 212, 123-18th Street, New Toronto, Ont.
NATlON WIDE, electromassage rental outlets are seeking additional reliable and able men to organize in their areas. They will control all rentals and sales of our nationally advertised
prodect. No triflers please. Must have a minimum of $2,000 to invest. You must Lae in the $15,000 - $50,000 calb bre. Write Lournar and. Associates Ltd.. 3089 Bathurst Street, Toronto 19, On.
tario
BE YOUR OWN BOSS I
OWN AND OPERATE
A Coin-Metered Unattended
Westinghouse Laundromat
Equipped Laundry Store.
Net 54,00048,000 Annually.
Write or phone today for full informa-tion about unattended coin-operated Westinghouse Laundromat equipped laundry store opportunities in your community. You manage in your spare time - while netting high income, We finance 90% of your total purchase, offer you longest financing period at lowest monthly installments. You re-ceive training and advice from a na-tional organization that has helped over 8500 men and women like you go into business for themselves. No ex-perience necessary. Modest invest-ment. This proven new profitable automatic business offers a money-making opportunity to anyone who
wants to own his own business, Com-pare our complete program.
ALD CANADA LTD.
54 Advance Road
Toronto 18, Ontario
ROger 6-7255
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE
RESTAURANT and service station with three-bedroom apartment above, situ-ated on' No. 3 Highway about five miles from St. Thomas. Will Beat about fifty persons' at a time, building in first class condition and large parking area, will take country in part pay, ill health reason for selling. Phone or write Geo. 11,,Cross, Broker, 86 Myrtle St. Thomas.
Hardware, Plumbing
Sheet Metal
', LONG established 'business in flour-ishing community, "Huron county". Will consider selling plumbing and or sheet metal separately. Ill health only reason for this offer. C. CLIFF HUNT, REALTOR, 284 Dundee •St., London. GE 2-1112, -
SCOTTISH TERRIERS
MALES and 'females, registered, Ex-cellent breeding.
Trimming a Specialty
Harris-Shire Kennels Registered. Hwy. 74, Belmont. Belmont 422-R-17.
ACKACHI
FARMS FOR SALE ----
MUSKOKA -- Farm for sale, 275 acres, 14 miles from Gravenhurst• Reason-able. Write to Mrs- Hazel Mitten, Wil-berforce, Ontadv, fee particulars,
e00-ACRE grain or cattle farm; 1%
miles northeast Derneeli, steel NO learn, drilled well, pressure system,
implement gibed, 0? garages hen
Lgroawvel.do down Priyom4:nr4t. .11)closeulkdayl340a011)s." please, le sobey, Williamsford, - - .
FOR, Sale; 118 acres, 9$ acres tillable, balance In bush, two never tailing wens. spring in pasture, good barn,
house, dairy,: granary, chicken house, ineelern nine monied house, good base-
ment, pleetrieitYe telephone, school
lane passes door; cheese factory Apply;
George Allen, not 40. L'Orignsti, On-Write
FARM MACHINERY
EBERSOL'S / MILVERTON Ebersol sezdwtrmicBilxoewres
E be rsol Hamm er Milli EbersolEbr
F eed
Carts
EBERSOL FARM ELEVATORS
EBERSOL GRAIN THROWERS
EBERSOL SWIVEL FEEDING CARRIERS
Ebersol Seed Mixers Ebersol Thresher Shredders Caswell Fwa r4 ryoe Ccrraat tee%
Caswell Cattle Currlers
Contact your Dealer or Write Elaersol Farm Equipment Company Limited,
Mliverton, Ontario, Phone 171.
GARDEN PLANTS.
IRIS, Beautiful tall bearded named varieties. Special bargains. Price list on request. Orton Robinson, 166 Dufferin Street, Guelph, Ontario.
GLADIOLUS BULBS
100 Gladiolus Bulbs, $2
IN ten varieties, to bloom this summer. Postpaid, Wrightland Farm, Harrow, Ont,
HELP WANTED.
LABORATORY TECHNICIAN - Imme. cilately - 5 day week, Apply - Super-intendent, Uxbridge General Hospital, Uxbridge, Ontario.
MACHINERY FOR SALE
FEED MILLS SURPLUS stock of new Tornado No. 15 feed mills, ball bearing with hop-per, must sell $49.00. Send for circu-lar, Federal, 185 King E., Toronto.
MEDICAL
A TRIAL - EVERY SUFFERER OF
RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
$1.23 Express Celled
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping ski n troubles. Post's Eczema Ealve will not disappoint you. Itching, ecfaling:and burning ecze-ma, acne, rinciyogneepimplee and foot eczema w1 Woad readily to the stainless, odo tment, regardless
of how stubbo .„5opeess they seem. Sent Post Ftly.'..4111.44weelpt of Price
PRICOS.SeteeePER JAR
POSVS -REMEDIES
1865 St:Clail:",Avenue East
. TORONTO
NURSES WANTED
General Duty Nurses
FOR modern 50 bed hospital. Resid-ence' accommodation available, 40 hour 5-day week. Good personnel benefits. Starting salary: new graduates $275.00, with experience $205.00, with Ontario Registration. also Supervisor of Nursing required. State
experience and salary expected. Ad-dress enquiries to: The Administrator, Sioux Lookout General Hospital, P.O. Box 909, Sioux Lookouts Ontario.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND. WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing -Pleasant dignified profession; good
wages. Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates America's Greatest System Illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 35$ Bloor St. W., Toronto Branches: 44 King St. W., Hamilton 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa.
PERSONAL
ANGLICAN Women Sunday School teachers, also same drivers needed, end May, Oct. B.C. prairies,expenses paid on van and travelling. School teachers accepted July, Aug. Mail ap-plication Eva Hasell, Synod office, Win-
nipeg.
DRUG STORE NEEDS BY MAIL
PERSONAL needs. Inquiries invited. Lyon's Drugs, 471 Danforth, Toronto. . •
BOY Trouble? Girl Trouble? Love Trouble? Don't suffer a day longer when expert advice can be obtained so easily, quickly, and cheaply, De-laying and bungling can mean total loss of your chance. Send me your Problem with $5.00 for prompt per-sonalized' analysis of what's wrong and what to do, STRICTLY CONFIDEN-TIAL. A, C. Martin, Box 184, McComb,
Miss., U.S.A.
WHERE'S PADDY? Tudor 04064 MOO, tuly"defos" (centre) itthd bit Hata teed the Reid at
.post in the 181st rtihning, of the English Derby at Epsom, Back M the parks the
favorite,Angers (arrow)... Owfied Met, Ralph Strassbur er Ali ers suffered` a liebiCeti lep
16644 arid had to be deStrOyetli t.t.; Paddy;. ah'EDglish horse, won the' de-04'e
stem. ESTATE • •• • ... • .
,ORIP.A! High wooded lots near 0414
$550 isept1;t I It, Ttegie
tared tx455Ntvleti itive
STAMPS
BIG Mystery Packet of Lee, Stempel. • Yew% be the envy of your friends, 100 with Approvals bonus -- stirpriseel
Pin'evu, Box 1544, Ogden, Utah.
SURPLUS MERCHANDISE
SthUelitrPLetlaSst!l iciroew ri ha ndi liste larthearcf,rateotlebnuo;
Send 51.00 to: Surplus Sales, •Hdele, Bldg., Washington (I, D.C, • - TRANSISTOR RADIOS
TRANSISTOR RADIO! With big z1/40'.
built-in speaker. Turn loud •for greelp enjoyment broadcast etc? t r rr'atinnITe e03151$ listening'. Full
1505 kc, Measures 4" x 21/2 " 7r Full price $14.95 postpaid, includes smartly
etYled ca rrying case. Pollak. 1621 Sec-ond Ave, St. Martin, Que., Canedil,
- • •••• • • TEACHERS WANTED
oCtLhAerRsE, NFoirOstN vl'arsesA eir•etqutit,1!raetse rteeqaue re:ds:.
Salary
principal for Plevna 2-room school and.
offered: $3,000 to 53 200, accord, Mg to sehooi and experience. Please state last inspector, For information, contact Mrs. E. A, Card, secretary-treasurer, Plevna, North Frontenac., . .
ST. EDWARD'S modern Separate School et Nipigon, Ont. Requires one Primary MethodsTeacher see teach-ers, Situated 80 miles from the Lake. head on -Trans Canaria Highway, Mod-ern town of over 2700 population, Mini-, mum Wary $3000, Experience• $1590. Annual increment $200x4.
Aanncryaddtraetsiallgor"le4slitf l'ciralst.leoeneSeoran.tdo n4117, Banning, Nipigon, Ontario.
TEACHER required for modern coune try school, Sudbury district, 4 miler from town. Starting Sept. term. 20 to 25 pupils all Grades. Apply stating qualifications and salary expected to. Conrad. Springer, Sec,-Treas. P,S.S No 1 Baldwin, McKerrow, Ont.
TEACHER required for September,
1960. Junior room, grades 1-3 inclusive. New modern sehool, 20 miles west Fort William, on Trans-Canada High-way. Salary minimum, $2,800.00 $200.09 allowance for each year, Up to 3 years experience.
APPLICANT to state qualifications, experience, age, last inspector, to Mrs. A. Maxwell, Sec., T.S.A. of Conmee, No. R,R.1, Kakabeka Falls, Ontario.
WHITE RIVER
PUBLIC SCHOOL
REQUIRES FOR SEPTEMBER
A qualified teacher to act as principal two-room school teaching Grades 5 to
SALARY: Basic $3,300; $100 per year for experience upe„to 8 years; $500 for principalship; $1,000 for B.A. or equi-valent; $200 year increment ,
GIVE experience and names of last inspectors.
R. G. MEALEY
SECRETARY-TREASURER
BOX FT, WHITE RIVER, ONT.
SUMMER STAFF WANTED
"ONTARIO Association for Retarded Children Camp Glen Wood at Lake Scugog Aug. 26-Sept. 2 for young adultse 'needs male counsellors, 20 years or over - honorarium $20.00. Write,Mrs. June Braaten, 40 Deepwood Cr., Dore 'Mills, Ont."
SUMMER RESORTS
CHALET Brunelle, Sportsmen's north-ern rendezvous on Rem! Lake near
Kapuskasing. Modern accommodation, fine French cuisine. Phone 414, write, Andree and 'Rene Brunelle, Moonbeam, Ont.
ROSELAWN LODGE, BALA ROOMS, cabins, all running water or private bathroom, fine food, beach, summer sports, friendly moderate, write or phone Roselawn Lodge, Bala Muskoka.
Blue Water Conference
NEAR WALLACEEURG, ONT.
CHRISTIAN FAMILY RESORT
$3.50 to e8,00 daily; all recreational facilities; evening meeting; Bible and missionary speakers. Folder. Write 153
King W., Chatham, Ont,
Le Montclair
MOST OUTSTANDING RESORT IN FAMED STE. ADELE VILLAGE
1. Largest swimming pool in the Lau-rentians, 3 diving boards, slide.
2, Illuminated Rubico tennis court. 3. Cosiest cocktail lounge. 4. Meals beyond compare. 5. Riding, boating, movies, golf and driving, range nearby.
6. Social and sports program under a
director. f. Summer theatre, art centre, music for dancing, t. Catholic and Protestant churches in the village, Outstanding Vacation At Reasonable Rates
Write For Folder R. T. Couillard Le Montclair, Ste. Adele, P.O.
VACATION PROPERTIES FOR SALE
GENERAL store and equipment, 2 gas pumps, storeroom and garage, also a 5-roomed house, plus bath and fur-nace, sell reasonable. Apply to box No. 22_ Port Rowan, Ont.
SASKATCHEWAN Licensed Hotels For Sale - 35 rooms, $60,000 with $30,000 ;,down 7 rooms, e15,000 with $5,000 'down 7 rooms, $17,000 with .$10,000
down _10 rooms, $75,000 with $55,000 down11 rooms, $30,000 with $15,000 down 8 rooms, $27,000 with $17,000 down city 55 rooms, $390,000 with $150000 down. BONNEAU'S AGENCIES,
Real'Estate, Gravelbourg, Sask.
CATTLE INSECTICIDES
CONTROL THE FACE FLY WITH the "BEST" Cattle Oiler and Insecticide Oil. This serious fly is al-ready attacking Cattle in great num• bers, Several satisfied users practically eliminated this pest during 1959, Start treatment early for effective control. Can be hung in pastures or feed lots. Kills lice all winter and flies all sum-mer. Save 50-75 lbs. on each animal treated. SEE your local dealer or contact George E. Gilbert Equipment Ltd., Leamington, Ontario. Phone E'A. 8-6262.
DOGS FOR SALE
May be Warning
Backache is often caused by lazy
kidney edible When kidneys get out of
order, excess acids and wastes remain
irr the system. Then backache, ins-
tilibed rest or that tired-out and hea*y-
headed feeling may Scam folk*. That'.
-the time to take Doild'a Kidney Piller
stimulate the kidrieyit to normal
action: Then yaii fed hiller-flees
1)etei.-ivork bitter., Get Dodd'il
1V Kidney rills now: 11,
GET 8 HOURS SLEEP
NERVOUS tension may cause 75% of sickness. Particularly sleeplessness, jitteryness and irritability. Sleep, calm
your nerves with "Napps", 10 for $1.00, 50 for $4,00. Lyon's Drugs, 471 Dan-
forth, Toronto.
PHOTOGRAPHY
SAVE! SAVE! SAVE!
Vitili•ttevdt6Eidit and 8 magna prints in albuni 401 12 Magna prints in inhere 60e Reprints 50 each
KODACOLOR
Developing telt $1.00 (not 'including prints). Color prints '351 cacti extra. .Ansco and Eltteehtoine35.nitn. c(56 20 1 ex- posures mounted in slides $1.25. pc tuts from slides 35e tech. .Money refunded in full tot imprinted'
FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB
, „...
BOX 31, GALT, ONT-,
PROPERTIES FOR SALE'—'
APARTMENT house - two acres of land, Tiverton,. 'Best location, 'center of nyuto Atomic Project, $11.500.00, Teetes, Reason poor health,Phone F. J.
or Box :30, 'neaten, Ont.
MUSKOKA M. Lake Erie lots $195 up. Improvements. Etiey theme C,oing Net. BOx 43i, Huntsville
IN hotel., Grimsby 2/5 acre %NIG, col-thee, living-dihine more, 3 bedrooms,
kitchen bathroom, flush toilet Apply
C A Bridgman, Menne, Ont
AO.
'Tee "eeeeeeente