HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1960-09-08, Page 7.. OF/ft Non won. no In am-den. Ir. MP ••••••••••
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CUNARD tscpaErukrrinpge Autniadnetri ta su n
A thousand miles along the sheltered, scenic Si. Lae rence then tour
memorable days of sun and fun. Sail the Atlantic at its refreshing best.
Oak MONTREAL AND Gliailat
IVE It NIA. AUG. 12, SEPT. 23, OCT. 14, NOV, 4, 26
t-YLVANIA
AUG. 14, SEPT. 4, 30, OCT. .21, NOV. 1 2
SA X 0 NIA
AUG. 26, SEPT. 16, OCT. 1, NOV. 19
dAkl$11-1I'A
AUG. 26, SEPT-. 16, OCT, 1, 29
SAILING'S 70 ENGLISH, SCOTTISH AND FRENCH F ors . „. ALSO FAS , FltEOUiNt SAILINGS PROM mew rove
ID% REDUCTION tell 'ROUND-TRIP IN THRIFT SEASON'
Set 7blittIOCAL Atiiht
No oitt -tAat SERVE YOWititER
teener Bay Will4stilott
ant,
atiitr.4' AtiktrAtitA,ii iiiiiANNid • iiiiiANILA S cARINtHIA 4 NORIA 4 iA7kOtaA • PARTHIA • MiWIA. ,„.. • , „
Ptewless British tetvite
• cuisine 50 delight nil tastes
• Dcititintfr parties, inevieh
• Dufy-iteit thoppiii4
4 Steillnieet for ifincleth sailing
4 Its lbs. tree lititigdijei
• Ail tiscludect yaw et:India titkat
es
King Jaenes And
The Mulberr:es .CLASSIFIED ADVERTING,
$1,
•
Greatest Of Ali
Earth's Pioneers?
In the, futur e, schools will
probably have courses in space
and space travel, just as boys
and girls are now taught all
about other lands in their geo-
graphies.
I have found every time I talk
before a group of science-mind•
ed listeners there are quite a
few of those questions which
need answers, What enables a
rocket motor to drive a stile
when there is "no air to push
against?" That is the most com-
mon question, but there arc
many others.
What will hold a space sta-
tion up, after -we build it? How
high is space? How dangerous
are meteors? Is space freezing
cold or boiling hot? What about
life on other worlds? If we can't
see the other side of the moon,
why can't there be life there?
It a station is only a thousand
miles up, why won't the people
inside feel the pull of the earth?
Will there he space wars? Can
we ever fly to the stars?
These questions need full an-
swers. To give those answers as
well as all the information to
cover fully the other questions
about space, is the purpose- of
this book.
It is not meant as a textbook.
Instead, it is really an adven-
ture story. It deals with an ad-
venture that has now barely be-
Precautions Blunt
Windstorm Peril
11-Sound house safest refuge, Bose-
latent corner best haven.
2-Stow away movable objects. Prone
branches near house. Board up
windows.
3-keep at hand battery powered
flashlight, extra food water.
Sheltered windows to leSSeit Open
interior pressure during sterni,' .
t14E STORM ffutrt,
a ntis, iortiadaers etriet 'oth'et
"hT0 winds" bon!i be napped but
with clt quite' Warning etti
precctUtionAherit tid,wiate, elan' be
minirriited., With the htillfearta
t)edson est hettidi les Wilt ft-fit ttd
tilaiid during gales away' from
Nigh Odes and Wavet. Which
thiterieeirtei,
gun, but one that has endless
opportunit.les. Going out into
space will be the greatest ad-
venture cei all time,
The only event that could
compare to such a breaking
away from the surface of earth
Was something done by a. fish, if
the scientists are right. Accord-
ing to what many scientists be-
lieve, that fish (called a, Cros-
sopterygian, or lobe fin) came
out of the water and moved
about in air a long time ago,
This would. make him the great-
est of all pioneers, since he and
his children changed from a life
In water to a life in air-almost
like a man changing hem a life
in our air to one in space.
Of course, the fish did not
know what he was doing. By
our standards, he was an ugly,
stupid creature. He was not even
a very remarkable fish. He was.
riot even very brave; and he
certainly was not the best fight-
er among fishes.
Today, those who suggest go-
ing out into space are faced with
the same arguments. "There's.
nothing up there to breathe. Men
will have to live in pressurized
suits or they may explode. What
good will it do? It will cost
• too much. when there are so
many other things that need
doing. And just how can we
steer a ship, when there's no
air to push against?"
Nevertheless, we are going
out into space. Right now, So-
viet and American satellites are
exploring space, Maybe it will
take ten years, or perhaps
twenty-five, to get men to the
moon, but young people alive
today will see it all happen.
The conquest of space is not
complete yet, but it is not just
science fiction now. - From
"Rockets Through Space," by
Lester Del Rey.
Nation-wide Search
For "Outdoors Girl"
Another nation-wide competi-
tion will be conducted during
the fall and winter months to
find a typical "Outdoors Girl of
Canada,"
The winner will be selected
from a grotfp of finalists at the
Mel Canadian National Sports.,
men's Show which will be held
in Toronto from March 10th to
l8th. After being crowned "Out-
doors Girl of Canada," the win-
ner will be the recipient of a
$500 Dominion of Canada Sav-
ings Bond and other valuable
prizes,
This unique competition is
jointly sponsored by the Ontario
Federation of Anglers and Hens
tars and the Canadian National
Sportsmen's ShoW,
Any Canadian girl, with the
exception of professional models
and professional athletes, is eli-
gible to enter providing she par-
tiCipates in some forth of out-
door sport Or recreation,
ations, however, toast be alb-
mated by a fish, game and con-
servation organization, any place
in Canada.
The closing date for entries
has been set at February 4th
next, Chiba wishing to nomin-
ate a candidate shettld. write to
the Canadian National Sports..
men's Show, 35 King street Last,
Toronto, for entry forms. A
t,,B$11, award of $100 will also`
:I-tad CO the Chile or other organi-
zation ,the nomina-
tion of the winning 'cOntestant.
The earliest known printing- by
was done in flabyloti
around 401 Engraved
stamps or seals were impressed
in moist elayi Which was then
• •While mulberry trees went
cultivated by the ,Greeks and
Romans and wore found in Nor-
thern gurope by the 10th cen-
tury, it was ,Tamcs I who really
popularized them in England.
His absorbing interest was riot
for the deliciously pungent fla-
vour of their wine-red berries,
or the beauty of their shape and
foliage, but for a far less no-
mantic reason, His Majesty's in,-.
Wrest was entirely commercial.
He hoped to establish a silky
worm industry. Early in the
17th century he is said to have
planted a mulberry g a is d e rt
where Choyne Walk now stands.
Certainly King James loft no
stone unturned to interest his
subjects in his project, and equip
them to aid him in his venture..
While he hoped "to perzwade
and require such as are of
ebilitie , , . to bale and distri.
bute . . the number of tee
thousand melberrie plants at the
rate of • three farthings the
plant," he shrewdly realized that
this exorbitant price might dis-
suade some of his subjects from
becoming mulberry growers or
silkworm merchants, so he de-
cided. to get "a good quantitie of
mulberry modes" which would
bring down the cost consider-
ably!
Lest any of .his subjects should
plunge into the mulberry-trees-
for-silkworms projects with in-
sufficient horticultural knowl-
edge, he informed them that the
ground for the seeds "must be
reasonably well. dunged, and
withal:I s o scituated, as that the
heate of the .sun may cherish it
and the nipping blasts of either
the North, Winde, or the East,
may not annoy it."
Though the face of England
may have changed greatly be-
tween the 17th and 20th cen-
turies, there is little change in
the routine of a gardener's life,
for he added that the mulberry
plants were to be sown in small
beds so that no one need "in-
danger the plants by treading
upon them, when either you wa-
ter or weede them."
"Before planting the mulberry
seedes," continued this practical
monarch, "they should be put
in water, for 22 hours, then half-
dried, and cast, upon the bed,
not altogether so thicke as other
garden seedes." Then .he added
firmly, "In dry weather you
shall water them every two
dayes and keep them as cleane
• frona; weeds as possibly ;you
Can.
But His Majesty's helpful in-
structions were not yet finished
writes Evelyn M. Finnell in the
Christian Science Monitor. He
also told his subjects which
months of the year the mul-
berry seed should be sown, al-
lowing foe frosts; even those
"not so sharpe. or of long con-
Ainuance," and at what height of
growth the roots of the plants
should be cut off. And Once
more he referred to the • need
for watering and weeding, add-
Mg, "always have a care to
take away the many branches
or succours that may in any
way hinder their growth." (Was
that the origin of the present-
day "sucker?")
Finally he told his patient
subjects that later when ti,e
"plants are waxen strong . . .
you may remove them into the
hedges of your fields, or into
other grounds." And for those
eager mulberry growers still
thirsting for further instructions,
he added that. they should al-
ways have "a special care to
place them that they may re-
ceive the benefit of the eunne,
and not be shadowed or Over-
spread by any neighbouring
trees,"
That the royal proteges did.
flourish in England is certain,
though the craze for silkworms
soon wore off; for to this day
you will find mulberry trees in
old country gardens, their one
or two hundred years' growth
Tcopped up by sturdy stakes,
hey still give five crops df
Itisoisetia berries for mulberry
preserve, or leave telltale stains,
on the lips of smell boys and
girls.
When you read that inflation
is making your. Money worth
less, it's 110 relief to reach into
your pocket and discover that
you have nothing fo worry about
A BEAM - Farmer Peter Sta-
re:, as is put in the shade by
a three-pound tomato he pick-
ed in his garden.
Contact Lenses
For And, .Against
Pretty girls out on a date wear
them, for appearance's sake.
Athletes wear them, of neces-
sity, And millions of men and
women wear, them for occupa-
tional reasons. In fact, an esti-
mated 0 million Americans now
view the world through contact
lenses, and their number is
growing by an estimated 500,-
000 per year. The contact-lens
industry has grown to a $200.
million enterprise, and the len-
ses themselves have been re-
fined to the point where they
are all but invisible - tiny disks
of unbreakable plastic which
float on the surface of the eye
like a lily pad on a pond. But,.
in. the face of this progress and
growing , public acceptance, eye
specialsts have recently raised
some serious questions.
Sonic of the nation's top
ophthalmologists have 'warned
that indiscriminate use of con-
tact lenses may injure the eye.
And they have charged that
some contact-lens advertisements
sound as if anyone can wear the
lenses safely for an indefinite
period of time. Moreover, at the
American Medical Association
convention last June, the dele-
gates challenged the qualifica-
tions of optometrists, who are
not M.D.'s to fit patients with
the lenses, and put through a
resolution declaring that the
work "is a proper medical func-
tion of physicians."
The optometrists last month
were fighting back. Riehard C.
presiderit of the Ameri-
can Optometric Association, told
NEWSWEEK the group is plan-
ning a counterresolution which
Will claim tha Las optometrists
"pioneered in the development
of an application of contact
lenses," it is their job to keep
on with the good work.
Regardless of who fits them,
ophthalmologists or optometrists,
just what are the hazards of
wearing contact lenses? Opin-
ions vary among the authorities.
In the current U.S. Armed Forces
Medical Journal, an Army oph-
thalmologist reports: "There is a
potential danger of .eye infection
or injury." According to Capt.
Richard K. Lansche, every con-
tact-lens wearer suffers "sting-
ing, burning, tearing, or foreign-
body sensations" at first, and this
often continues for several weeks.
About 15 per cent of the patients
never succeed in adjusting to
the lenses. If the syMptoms are
ignored, he warns, the cornea's
lining could break, leaving the
eye seriously vulnerable to in-
fection. It could, he said, "be
destroyed in 24 to 48 hours."
Wearing the lenses too. long, or
inserting them roughly, Dr.
Lansche says, can also damage
the cornea.
"I can't see a patient, being so
careless," retorted optothetrist
Schiller when asked about
Lansche's charges, 'Perhaps
AGENTS WANTED.
EARN EXTRA MONEY
Agents, Clube, etc, Sell Canada's fineSt
Xmas. Cards, Novelties, etc. Over 230
items Including Deluxe, Religious, Vel-
vet, chrome,„ Everyday And Personal
cardS, Wraps, Ribbons, Toys, Booki, Dells' and Jewelry. Many Gift Re*,
Prompt Service. For colored eataiogue• and samples on approval, phone W. V.
JEANDRON GREETING. VAR!". Co.,
1253 KING ST. E., 'Hamilton, 1,
44311.
'NEW low prEirLu fs3.Yon C1H0.11C2KuSueek old Put-
lets, and Started chicks, Prompt ship-ment, Dayolds to order. October-
November broilers should be ordered
now. Request list, see local agent, or Nwfi lintelittlonryoaHto.teheril, 120 John North,
BARN EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
BADGER Northland barn cleaners,
sile unleaderS, auger and tube feed. ers, round.thc.silo feeders, food earts
and
barnecillifnstmealita' Installations. Y equipped
for complete Complete
stock available at warehouses. Harold.
Row and Sons, II ft. No, 1, Belmont.
Ont. Phone liarrtetsville 76.
BUSINESS PROPERTIES
AGED- couple, pavement village gen.
oral store including equipment, stock,
large living apt. only 621,000. Good terms, $3000 monthly turnover, pros-
perous farm area, Win. Pearce, Real-tor, Exeter,
FARMS FOR SALE
60 ACRES level clay loam- 5 acres to bush. Duplex house with Self contained apartment 2 miles from rapidly ex-
Pawling city. Mixed farming area,
Close to highway. Apply to Mr. Goo,
A. Wolff, R.R. No, 2' ST. THOMAS. On-tario. This advcrtisernent Is published
free as one of the ninny benefits of:--THE ALLIED SERVICES (CANADA)
P.O. BOX 1029, LONDON, ONT,
DAIRY farm of 150 acres. Early rolling
clay loam land with Toronto milk con-
tract. Gravel pit on property. 15 room
brink house Location enables this to be used to advantage with tourists.
Will sell with or without herd. APPLY
benefits of. -
Mr. Harold L. R.R. No. 2, CAN:
is published free as one of the many
NINGTO'N, Ontario This advertisement
THE ALLIED SERVICES (CANADA)
P.O. BOX 1029, LONDON, ONT.
185 ACRES, 160 workable. 12 room brick house, 2 bathrooms. Barn "12'
81 x 45 x 70 x 40, stands for 48 head
with water. Barn equipped with milk line, Has contract for 1000 lbs. milk
daily. Will sell with or without 103
head. Apply Mr. Earnest Barnhardt,
.R.R. No. 2HAWKESTONE, Ontario.
This advertisement is published free as one of the ream, benefits of: - THE ALLIED SERVICES (CANADA)
P.O. BOX 1029, LONDON, ONT.
550 ACRES suit Father, son, Two good
brick houses, oil furnaces, bathrooms,
good barns new steel roofs, concrete
'silos, accommodation for 75-100 cattle
loose, 5000 hens, automatic feed. water.
DrIveshed 28' x 00', abundant water in
buildings and pasture for 75 cattle.
$30,000. Wm. Pearce, Realtor, Exeter. -, -
FARMS WANTED-
FARMS wanted, 50 acres and more,
good buildings and stream on the property, Harry Saving, Realtor, 45.5
Spactina Ave. Room 202, Toronto, Ont.
WA. 4-9881,
FARM MACHINERY'
NEW Allis-Chalmers 66 Big Bin All
Crop Harvesters complete with Scour
Klee'', On sale this week and next,
$1500.00. E. P. Abey Limited 444
Wharncliffe Rd. S. London. GE. 2-7597.
FARM and industrial tractors, loaders,
backhoes, combines and balers, All
makes and models. Lowest financing
rates and most reasonable prices. Your
Massey-Ferguson Dealer, Hanson Sup-
ply Ltd., 124 King St. W„ Stoney Creek.
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
BUCKEYE Ditcher 15"_51/2' in perfect shape, Money maker for owner and
fernier. Box 217, 123-18th Street, New
Toronto, Ont.
ATTENTION Car Owners - Police
estimate 30,000 cars will be stolen this
year. Protect yours, Install Automatic
Alarm $9.95. Allied 'Import Agency, Box
188, Station 11, MONTREAL.
JOHN Bean Sprayer, Low Boy Model,
excellent condition, privately used. Scowl Hundred and fifty dollars, cost
twenty two hundred. Also one way disc nine feet, ninety five dollars,
Orchard Sold. Thos. Price, COoksville,
P.O.
Gasoline and oil handling equipment -
'ranks. new and used - Tank truckS - Truck tanks - Viking pumps and
parts Goodyear hoses Johns Man-
ville linings - Pipe used - Tank trail.
ers Used Washmobile car washers:
Special: $250.00
R. ST, GERMAIN 6568 St. Lawrence, Montreal, Que.
there is one in a hundred who
has difficulty wit is contact
lenses, but not such serious prob-
lems as would permanently in-
jury the eye."
A random sampling of New
York ophthalmologists agreed
with him. Just the same, the dee-
tors' think that optometrists-
and their patients - should ap-
proach contact lenses with cau-
tion.
ISM 34 - 1960
FOSTER PARENTS AND
EMPLOYMENT WANTED
WANTED. Understanding foster par.
wits capable of supervising giris of school age, Theseiris have Perrign*
ality problems and will be under board. log care. Domestic employment is also
required for girls 16 10 18 in a good
family setting; reasonable wages, AP-ply Stiperintendent, P.O. Box 307. Gait.. Ont. .„.
GREETING CARDS , -
"CHRISTMAS Cards earn }eta extra money. Details Gem Greeting Cards,
7 Deanfleld Crescent, Islington."
HELP WANTED . .•
BAKER, bread andpastry.. nuts( be
well experienced, bakery located 15
miles out of Ottawa, steady job, good
wages. References required. Box 119,
itichmond, Ont nazoldean 930112.1,
HELP WANTED MALE -
APPLIANCE SERVICEMAN
ESTABLISHED appliance anti hardware
store located within 20 miles of Tor-
onto requires the services of an ex-
perienced and courteous major electri-
cal appliance serviceman, 25 to 40 years
of age, one seeking a position that
offers opportunities for advancement.
Knowledge of Television an asset, Good
working conditions with hospitalization
and pension plan. $3,400.00 to $4,200.00
per year according to experience. Apply in writing to Box 216, 123, Elgti.
teenth St., New Toronto, Ont.
TEMPORARY FARM HELP is requir-
ed as a result of an accident. Some ex pe ri ence with Surge milkers. Apply to Mr. Austin Glahn, BERVIE, Ontario.
This advertisement is published free
as one of the many benefits of:-THE ALLIED SERVICES (CANADA)
P.O. BOX 1029, LONDON, 'ONT. - -
WANTED. Beef cattle herdsman with
general farming experience for small
Angus herd bordering western Ontario city Family man around 40 with son
Interested in 4-H Club preferred. Free house permanent position. Apply stat-
ing experience, wages expected. Box
215. 123.18th Street, New Toronto Ont.
MEDICAL
CONSTIPATED? Be cured now for life! No Drugs! No Medicine! Satisfaction
Guaranteed! Only $2.00- GABRIEL. 7459
Champlain, Chicago 19, Illinois.
PROVEN REMEDY - EVERY SUFFERER
OF RHEUMATIC PAINS NEURITIS
SHOULD 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, scalding and burning exze.
ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot
eczema will respond readily to the
stainless odorless ointment, regardless
of how stubborn or hopeless they seem.
Sent Post Free on Receipt of price
PRICE 53.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1865 St. Clair Avenue East,
TORONTO • -
NURSES WANTED
NORA FRANCES
HENDERSON HOSPITAL
INVITES applications From 'graduate
nurses for general duty services, perm-
anent and summer relief. Excellent
personnel policies and fringe benefits.
APPLICATIONS with full details to
SUPERINTENDENT OF NURSES
NORA FRANCES
HENDERSON HOSPITAL
HAMILTON, ONTARIO
REGISTERED NURSES
ELIGIBLE FOR
CALIFORNIA REGISTRATION
SALARY is 5-step with yearly in-
creases.
Nurse-Anesthetist
AND
Part-Time Supervisor
SALARY STARTS AT $464 TO 1581
Surgery Scrub Nurse
$415 TO $519; WITH EXPERIENCE
START AT 2ND STEP.
HAVE modern residence, $15 monthly:.
Retirement and social security, WRITE - Director of Nurses - Tulare Kings Hospital, Springville California,
U.S.A. , . .„._.
NUTRIA
WiLL NUTRIA
BE YOUR FUTURE?
All the signs point to a bright and brit-
Rant market for this luxury fur, But success will come only through proper breeding methods, quality foundation
stock, plus a program based on sound
business methods. We offer all of this
to you as a rancher, using our exclu-
sive breeders plait. Special offer to
those who qualify, "earn your nutria
under our co-operative ranchers' plan".
Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd., R.R. 1, Richmond Hill, Ontario,
OPPORTUNITIES
SCHOOL principals or established tea-
chers for each Province to act as our
area representative in part capacity for
the brand new Encyclopedia Canadiena,
so sensationally written up in editorials
in Time, MacLeans,and leading news. papers, across Canada, This is the first
and only Canadian Encyclopedia, and
B must in every school. Leads for school purchases supplied Prom thou-
sands now on hand. Write D. Simpson,
Director of School and Library Ser-vices, 66 Bailey Crescent, Scarborough,
Ont,
OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOBtf,
Great Opportunity
Learn hairdressing.
Pleasant dignified PrOfeSsitnil g9,94 wages, ThIMSandS of successful
Marvel Graduates America's Greatest System
Illustrated Catalogue Frei
Write or all
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL
358 Bloor St. W-4 Toronto
Branches:
49 King St. W., Hamilton
72 Rideau Street, Ottawa
PERSONAL
"MAKE YOUR OWN WILL:" Sirn211; inexpensive. Approved for all Canaalffi
Provinces, Two Will forms only $1.9 National Forms, Box 40313, Los Antelea 48, California, U.S.A.
LADIES - Domes Female Pills, $5.00,
Lyon's Drugs, 471 Danworth, Toronto.
DRUG STORE NEEDS BY MAIL
PERSONAL needs. Inquiries invited.
Lyon's Drugs, 471 Danforth, Toronto.
ADULTS; Personal liulther Goods, 30
assortment for 52.00. Finest quality, tested, guaranteed. Mailed in plate
sealed package plus free Birth Control
booklet and catalogue of supplies.
Western Distributors, BOX 24TF Reolna, Sask.
.---•
GET 8 HOURS SLEEP
NERVOUS tension may cause 75% 0 sickness, Particularly sleeplessnesh,
jitteryness and irritability. SiCeP, cal your nerves with ":;apps", 10 for $1.
50 for $4,00, Lyon's Drugs, 471 Danfort ,
Toronto
types {including Poems) for hook pu
AUTHORS Invited submit MSS 1L
ileation. Reasonable terms Stockwe
Ltd., Ilfracombe, England rEst'd 1898,)
6100,00 REWARD will be paid for 1 formation leading to the capture an
conviction of the persons resporisib4
for the theft of the following:- Tw
mares from Mr. Roy Barton of lI.I1, No. 2, Dalkelth Ontario. One weighs 1600
lbs., black with white patch 8" x
2" between eyes. Second weighs 1300
lbs. all black. Police and Law enforce-
ment agencies are excluded. All in-formation to:-
THE ALLIED. SERVICES (CANADA)
P.O. BOX 1029, LONDON, ONTARIO.
PET STOCK
SIAMESE Kittens. Pedigreed, Home
Trained. Healthy and affectionate. Cho-
colate, Blue, and Seal Point, From show winners. R. K. Ready. R R.
Byron, Ontario 342J3.
PHOTOGRAPHY
ULTRA FINE GRAIN
PROFESSIONAL fine grain developing for your miniature DM) 10¢ per e*' posuro
Qualitye deluxe enlargement of each. developing and print-
ing - 504 for 8 exposure roll 70 far
12 exposure roll, with every print beau-tifully enlarged, For the ultimate in
quality, mail your films to: Apex Phot6
Printers, Box 25, Station E, Toronto,
SAVE money on your film, Fraff patalogue. Ross Jamieson, 74 Lakeshore.
Rd., Toronto 14.
QUALITY enlargements from y
favourite print or negative. Fr
negative, 5 x 7 40¢, 8 x 10 75¢, 11 x $1.50. No negative, add 650. Apex Pho
Printers., Box 25, Station E, Toronto,
FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB
BOX 31, GA.LT, ONT,
Films developed and
magna prints 400
12 magna prints 600
Reprints 5¢ each
KODACOLOR
Developing roll 90$ (not including prints). Color prints 300 each extr . Ansco and Ektachrome 35 mm. 20 e -postures mounted in slides $1.20. Cold*
prints from slides 320 each. Money
funded in full for unprinted negatives.
PROFITABLE OCCUPATIONS
THREE month membership with regu-
lar monthly benefits including modelS, extra income and royalty privilegee.
Enjoy these fun filled oPportunitleal
Mail $1 00 to: Models, Box 13363, Tampa 11, Florida.
TAXI BUSINESS FOR SALE
TAXI BUSINESS - flown town, over
2,000 population in South Western Oni
tario, also covers a heavy Populate surrounding area. Town turned wet. '
cars, owner ill, $6,000. Apply at Michael
Sokyrka, Realtor, Waterford, Ont. Phone HI 38.323 Or 3-0392.
TEACHERS WANTED
BLACK River Tounship School Area
No 1 requires a teacher for a rural
school of 35 pupils, Oracles I to V
inclusive. Salary 53,000 to 53,1100, de-
pending on qualifieations and expert. enee. The school is 12 miles west of
Matheson on 'Highway MI. Apply to
Mrs. Nene. Griffiths, secretary; slats
lington, Ontario, stating age, qualifier,-
lions, experience and name of last in-
sp tor.
PUBLIC School Section No, 1, Stevens
Thunder Bay District, reqnires in Sept!,
1960, a qualified teacher for grades I to IL Teacher's recleraUon salary soled.
the in effect. Furnished teachcrag•
will acconnuodate married couple,
Available at $15 per month
APPLY in writing, stating eget am
delnid qualifications and mune and a+ dress of last inspector. to C. Mae*,
Sea-Treas.. P.S.S No, 1. Stevens, 0+ tub),
SEEING EYE TO EYE - Boy with black eye from a baseball
accident, Charlie Jones, 7, gets together with his pal, Squire.
a '1111.440;
•